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Kaleberg's avatar

I'll throw in a curveball here. There was a paper from Voigtländer and Voth back in 2013, "The Gifts of Mars: Warfare and Europe's Early Rise to Riches". They make the argument that Europe was a hard place to conquer and pacify, so it was in a constant state of warfare and that wars and the diseases associated with warfare killed enough people to keep Europe from reaching its Malthusian limit. Food might get scarcer as population grew, but odds are a war would wipe out enough people to prevent the kind of starvation found in more peaceful areas. <sarcasm>Oh, happy day! Thank you God of War.</sarcasm>

I can't say I'm convinced, but there is something to the argument. People often wonder how Europe got so wealthy. Could it have been all those horrible wars? Could it have been diseases carried by soldiers as they moved from strategic post to strategic post? Wars might be bad news, but the Black Death had a major positive impact on the economics and politics of the continent.

As I said, this is a curveball.

Martin Wolf's avatar

This is brilliant, even by your standards, Brad.

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