Episode Synopsis "The Influence of Ancestral Lifeways"
Characteristics of our ancestors are often passed down through generations. A certain degree of economic performance and cultural values persist throughout time, but if we are taken out of the physical location of our ancestors, to what extent do these characteristics remain? A recent paper suggests a connection between the extent one's ancestors practiced an agricultural lifestyle and one's economic and education outcomes today. By looking at how ethnic groups made their living in Sub-Saharan Africa generations ago, there is some indication of how their descendants will fare in the future. Stelio Michelopolous of Brown University talks with us on this episode about this fascinating connection and how history can be an overlooked determinant in development.
Listen "The Influence of Ancestral Lifeways"
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