Culture, Diffusion, and Economic Development
Published By: LICOS Institute on eSS | Published Date: August, 30 , 2016This research explores the effects of culture on technological diffusion and economic development.
It shows that culture’s direct effects on development and barrier effects to
technological diffusion are, in general, observationally equivalent. In particular, using
a large set of measures of cultural values, it establishes empirically that pairwise differences
in contemporary development are associated with pairwise cultural differences
relative to the technological frontier, only in cases where observational equivalence
holds. Additionally, it establishes that differences in cultural traits that are correlated
with genetic and linguistic distances are statistically and economically significantly correlated
with differences in economic development. These results highlight the difficulty
of disentangling the direct and barrier effects of culture, while lending credence to the
idea that common ancestry generates persistence and plays a central role in economic
development. [Discussion paper No.382].
Author(s): Ani Harutyunyan, Omer Ozak | Posted on: Oct 07, 2016 | Views() | Download (586)