Published Date
June 1, 2024
Research Cluster
Culture, Religion and Long-Term Consequences
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2024.01.003
Publisher
Journal of Comparative Economics (Elsevier)
Series
Volume 52, Issue 2
Copyright
2024

Centre for Quantitative History
Survival cannibalism persisted across human societies until recently. What drove the decline in cannibalism and other forms of violence? Using data from the 1470–1910 period, this paper documents that in historical China, the Confucian clan—an institutionalized kinship network—acted as an informal internal market to facilitate intra-clan resource pooling and risk-sharing, thus reducing the need for cannibalism during times of drought-related famine. The risk mitigation role of the clan remains robust after controlling for economic development and other factors and ruling out alternative channels. Thus, kinship networks and their associated culture contributed to human civilizational development before the advent of formal markets.
Chair of Finance
Cheng Yu-Tung Professor in Finance
Director, Centre for Quantitative History
Director, HK Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences
HKU Business School
Associate Professor
School of History
Renmin University of China