Cereals, appropriability, and hierarchy
Joram Mayshar, Omer Moav, Zvika Neeman, Luigi Pascali
11 September 2015 – voxeu.org
Conventional theory suggests that hierarchy and state institutions emerged due to increased productivity following the Neolithic transition to farming. This column argues that these social developments were a result of an increase in the ability of both robbers and the emergent elite to appropriate crops. Hierarchy and state institutions developed, therefore, only in regions where appropriable cereal crops had sufficient productivity advantage over non-appropriable roots and tubers.