| Abstracts 2005 |
Department
of Economics
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No.
05-1 Gregory K. Dow, Nancy Olewiler, and Clyde Reed
"The
Transition to Agriculture:
Climate Reversals, Population Density, and Technical Change"
Abstract:
Until about 13,000 years ago all humans obtained their food through hunting
and gathering, but thereafter
people in some parts of the world began a transition
to agriculture. Recent data strongly implicate climate change as the driving
force behind the agricultural transition in southwest Asia. We propose a model
of this process in which population and technology respond endogenously to
climate. The key idea is that after a lengthy period of favorable environmental
conditions during which regional population grew significantly, an abrupt
climate reversal forced people to take refuge at a few ecologically favored
sites. The resulting spike in local population density reduced the marginal
product of labor in foraging and made agriculture attractive. Once agriculture
was initiated, rapid technological progress through artificial selection on
plant characteristics led to domesticated varieties. Farming became a permanent
part of the regional economy when this productivity growth was combined with
climate recovery.
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