In 1798, British economist Thomas Malthus proposed a strikingly pessimistic theory about social progress: humanity, he argued, would never be able to rise above mere subsistence for long because for every advancement in production, the resulting population growth would soon outpace available resources, resulting in population decline and a return to square one. But, as economist Galor (Brown Univ.) notes in his sweeping new history of wealth, production, and inequality, Malthus was right about the past and dead wrong about the future. Broadly, Galor sets out to answer why, after thousands of years, humanity was in fact finally able to escape the “poverty trap.” More importantly, he seeks to understand why some nations and people have been able to thrive and produce monumental gains in material wealth while many others are little better off than they were 200 or 2,000 years ago. While engaging, the author’s compression of his decades of anthropological, sociological, and economic research into a slim volume may leave some readers wanting more context.
VERDICT Readers of Big Science and Big History will like this wide-angle look at one of humanity’s most persistent and dangerous problems.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!