Episode Synopsis "The European Origins of Economic Development"
European colonialism involved atrocities for the indigenous people who lived on the land on which Europeans settled. It only makes sense that the effects of colonialism would persist hundreds of years later. One way to look at the effects of this history is to analyze the relationship between economic outcomes today and the intensity of European settlement during the colonial era. Europeans brought oppressive regimes and often set up institutions that were designed to extract wealth from the native population. But they also brought technologies and institutions that may be conducive to economic growth. So what can history tell us about how this tradeoff ended up centuries later? On this episode, we talk with William Easterly of New York University and Ross Levine of the University of California, Berkeley to find out a little more about the lasting effects of European colonialism.
Listen "The European Origins of Economic Development"
More episodes of the podcast The Success Project - Development Research Institute
- The Bai Clansmen
- How Much Do Leaders Explain Growth?
- The Murid Ethic and the Spirit of Entrepreneurship
- The European Origins of Economic Development
- The Influence of Ancestral Lifeways
- Greene Street: A Long History of a Short Block
- Foreign Bank Entry and Entrepreneurship
- The Economic Case for Migration Restrictions
- Housing Affordability: Top-Down Design and Spontaneous Order