The Origins of the State: Technology, Cooperation and Institutions

45 Pages Posted: 25 Jun 2020 Last revised: 8 Dec 2020

See all articles by Giacomo Benati

Giacomo Benati

University of Barcelona - Economic History

Carmine Guerriero

Department of Economics, University of Bologna

Date Written: June 2, 2020

Abstract

espite the vast evidence on the economic relevance of the state's institutional capacity to provide public goods and incentivize risk-sharing and innovation, we lack an organic and empirically sound theory of its origins. To help fill this gap, we develop a theory of state formation shedding light on the rise of the first stable state institutions in Bronze Age Mesopotamia. Our analysis suggests that the mix of adverse production conditions and unforeseen innovations pushed groups favored by old technologies to establish the state by granting political and property rights to powerless individuals endowed with new and complementary skills. Through these reforms, the elite convinced the nonelite that a sufficient part of the returns on joint investments would be shared via public spending and, thus, to cooperate and accumulate a culture of cooperation. Different from alternative theories, we stress that: 1) group formation is heavily shaped by unforeseen shocks to the returns on risk-sharing and innovation; 2) complementarity in group-specific skills is key determinant of state formation; 3) military, merchant and, especially, religious ranks favored reforms towards stronger nonelites' rights and the spread of a culture of cooperation; 4) access to violence is not a crucial institutional engine.

Keywords: Geography; Time-Inconsistency; State-building; Culture of Cooperation.

JEL Classification: O13, H10, D23

Suggested Citation

Benati, Giacomo and Guerriero, Carmine, The Origins of the State: Technology, Cooperation and Institutions (June 2, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3582116 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3582116

Giacomo Benati

University of Barcelona - Economic History ( email )

Diagonal 690
Barcelona, Barcelona 08034
Spain

Carmine Guerriero (Contact Author)

Department of Economics, University of Bologna ( email )

Piazza Scaravilli 2
Bologna, 40126
Italy

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