The Economic Origins of Government

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Abstract

We test between cooperative and extractive theories of the origins of government. We use river shifts in southern Iraq as a natural experiment, in a new archeological panel dataset. A shift away creates a local demand for a government to coordinate because private river irrigation needs to be replaced with public canals. It disincentivizes local extraction as land is no longer productive without irrigation. Consistent with a cooperative theory of government, a river shift away led to state formation, canal construction, and the payment of tribute. We argue that the first governments coordinated between extended households which implemented public good provision.

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APA

Allen, R. C., Bertazzini, M. C., & Heldring, L. (2023). The Economic Origins of Government. In American Economic Review (Vol. 113, pp. 2507–2545). American Economic Association. https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.20201919

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