Unmaking inequality: a history of violence Walter Scheidel (Stanford University) Borgerhoff Mulder et al., Science
Unmaking inequality: a history of violence
Walter Scheidel
(Stanford University)
Borgerhoff Mulder et al., Science 326 (2009): study of
intergenerational wealth transmission and dynamics of inequality
in 21 small-scale societies (type of wealth/wealth transmission)
Growing resource inequality in England and Wales
Share of the richest 1% in national net worth
1700 39%
1740 44%
1810 55%
1875 61%
1911/13 69%
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Only a particular type of war generally lowers
inequality!
Requires mass mobilization that
• raises state demands on the rich (to pay for war)
• raises redistribution to the poor (army service,
more general commitment to war effort)
• favors state centralization and growth (to
organize war)
• disfavors elite entitlements (e.g. feudal rights)
• favors entitlements for the poor (e.g. property
rights, protections)
Mass mobilization is a fairly modern phenomenon
(especially since the French Revolution)
– but there are earlier historical antecedents
From the 5th to 3rd
centuries BC, longterm
inconclusive and
symmetrical warfare
between Warring
States relying on
ever-larger conscript
infantry armies led
to:
suppression of hereditary nobility and feudal rights; direct
taxation for war-making; periodic population registration;
property rights for peasants; re-allocation of conquered
land to conscripts; legal codification
>> lowering overall inequality
Only a particular type of war generally lowers
inequality!
In the historically common environment of
tributary empires, successful wars:
• raise inequality on the winning side (inflow of
resources captured by elite >> rich get richer;
inflow of captives/slaves >> more poor people)
• lower it on the losing/conquered side (in
percentage terms, the rich stand to lose more
from being defeated than the poor)
BUT: both groups become part of a larger system
that is more unequal overall
Ancient Rome as the quintessential tributary empire
Annual income figures for ‘middling’ aristocrats
reported in Roman sources:
100,000-600,000 sesterces (mid-first century BC;
Cicero)
1,000,000 sesterces (late first century AD; Pliny the
Younger)
6,000,000-9,000,000 sesterces (late fourth century AD;
Olympiodorus)
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Revolutions
Russia, China, Cuba, Cambodia…
French Revolution:
French inequality was high in 18th century, fell 1790-1815 due to:
• Abolition of regressive tax (dime) & feudal rights (corvee, etc)
• Confiscation of church and aristocratic properties, acquired by
people at different income levels >> share of land held by elite
dropped from 42% in 1788 to 12% in 1802, share held by
paysans rose from 30% to 42%
• Salaries of urban workers rose by 62% from late 1780s to
c1800, against 28% rise of the price of wheat
• Inflation benefited tenants who paid rents in depreciated cash
>> overall decrease in income share of upper class
BUT: inequality again rises afterwards, esp. with industrialization
from c1830
BUT: only transformative revolutions lower
inequality
Civil wars as such do not lower inequality
Study of civil wars in 128 countries from 1960 to
2005 finds that inequality rises both during civil wars
and especially right afterwards
Why? Because civil war:
• allows uncontrolled profiteering by small minority
• interferes with access to market for the poor
• interferes with state taxation and redistribution
including social spending
(Bircan, Bruck and Vothknecht 2010)
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
The impact of a massive exogenous
mortality shock (plague) on real wages:
the case of the Black Death (Pamuk
2007)
Black Death
0
2
4
6
8
1 0
1 2
260/50
210/180
120/90 BCE
100/160 CE
190/270
400/550
570/720
780/850
1000/1050
Daily wheat wage
Daily wheat wages for unskilled rural laborers in Egypt, 260 BC – 1050 AD,
in liters of wheat
(Scheidel 2012)
Plague!
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7
Centuries CE
Heigth in cm
Mediterranean
Center-West
Mean body height in Mediterranean and Central/Western Europe
(Köpke and Baten 2005)
Plague! Plague!
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Share of assets owned by richest 1% of adult men,
United States
1774 13.2%
1860 32.7%
(Civil War 1861-5, abolition of slavery)
1870 27%
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Summary of the argument
Development tends to increase resource inequality
Agrarianism; Industrialism
Violent shocks are the only factors capable of significantly reducing
resource inequality (for a while)
Violence
Mass-mobilization wars
Transformative revolutions
State collapse
Demographic contraction
Pandemics
Other factors are exotic or ineffective (abolition of slavery,
migration, financial crises)
Financial crises only very temporarily reduce inequality
(unless they are linked to major shocks such as wars: Germany,
France after World War I)
9/11
Financial crisis
Or are there built-in ‘checks’ – i.e., does rising inequality generate
countervailing forces, such as violent internal resistance?
Large body of scholarship on whether inequality is a cause of civil
wars:
• Earlier literature tended to confirm relationship
• Most comprehensive recent surveys fail to find clear
relationship
• 2013 study of proxy feature (deprivation) again suggests
strong relationship
BUT: remember that civil wars per se do not lower inequality and
may actually raise it!
Where do we go from here?
The traditionally effective mechanisms
• mass-mobilization wars
• transformative revolutions
• major epidemics
• abolition of slavery
are no longer available to us today ( – nor should we
want them to be…)
Other types of events, such as civil wars and financial
crises, do not solve the problem
History does not determine present or future actions
and outcomes
but
it casts doubt on the prospects of policy measures that
are not contextualized within these historically effective
processes…
… especially in an environment of ongoing globalization
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