- GNXP's Darth Quixote asks ten questions of Steven  Pinker.
- Chris  Roach reflects on the 40th anniversary of the Hungarian Revolution
- Michael  Blowhard says nice things about me, along with much else of interest about  the impact of the Web on written discourse in America.
- Genetic distance of populations correlates with economic differences:
The  Diffusion of Development
by Enrico Spolaore and Romain Wacziarg
This paper studies the barriers to the diffusion of development across countries  over the very long-run. We find that genetic distance, a measure associated with  the amount of time elapsed since two populations' last common ancestors, bears a  statistically and economically significant correlation with pairwise income  differences, even when controlling for various measures of geographical  isolation, and other cultural, climatic and historical difference measures.  These results hold not only for contemporary income differences, but also for  income differences measured since 1500 and for income differences within Europe.  We uncover similar patterns of coefficients for the proximate determinants of  income differences, particularly for differences in human capital and  institutions. The paper discusses the economic mechanisms that are consistent  with these facts. We present a framework in which differences in human  characteristics transmitted across generations - including culturally  transmitted characteristics - can affect income differences by creating barriers  to the diffusion of innovations, even when they have no direct effect on  productivity. The empirical evidence over time and space is consistent with this  "barriers" interpretation.   [More]
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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