比较发展的宏观进化起源

Macroevolutionary Origins of Comparative Development

Economic Journal · 2023
被引 1
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

利用进化理论分析人类走出非洲对大型哺乳动物灭绝的影响,进而探讨灭绝率如何通过生物地理、疾病环境和制度差异驱动长期经济发展差异。

Abstract

Abstract Advances in evolutionary theories (the Extended Synthesis) demonstrate that organisms systematically modify environments in ways that influence their own and other species’ evolution. This paper utilises these theories to examine the economic consequences of human dispersal from Africa. Evidence shows that early humans’ dispersal affected the adaptability of animal species to human environments and, through this, the extinction of large mammals during Homo sapiens’ out-of-Africa migration. Empirical analyses explore the variation in extinction rates as a source of exogenous pressure for cooperation and innovation among hunter-gatherers and examine the impact of extinction on long-run development. The results indicate that extinction affects economic performance by driving continental differences in biogeography, disease environments and institutions. Eurasia’s location along the out-of-Africa migratory path provided human and animal populations with co-evolutionary foundations for domestication and agriculture, which gave Eurasians technological and institutional advantages in comparative development.

人类迁徙大型哺乳动物灭绝协同进化比较发展