I really hate when people don't summarize articles.
Here's an AI summary by Claude:
The standard narrative that global extreme poverty declined with the rise of capitalism is flawed; the empirical evidence indicates the rise of capitalism initially caused immiseration across much of the world, and substantial progress against extreme poverty only occurred centuries later, often correlating with progressive social movements rather than capitalism itself. As hundreds of millions still live in extreme poverty today, capitalism has failed to deliver universal progress against poverty.
So, here's an AI outline:
The Standard Public Narrative on Global Poverty and Capitalism
- The standard public narrative holds that:
- Extreme poverty is the natural condition of humanity
- Around 90% of people lived in extreme poverty before the 1800s
- Global poverty only began declining with the rise of capitalism in the 19th century
Problems with the Evidence Supporting this Narrative
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The narrative relies heavily on a graph first created by Martin Ravallion, later popularized by Steven Pinker
- The graph suggests 90% of people lived in extreme poverty (<$1.90/day) before 1800
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But the graph has several problems:
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Mixes two inconsistent data sources:
- National Accounts Statistics (NAS) before 1980
- Household consumption surveys after 1980
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NAS do not account well for non-commodity forms of provisioning like subsistence farming and commons, which were important historically
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Using NAS to estimate historical poverty introduces errors, as growth in NAS does not necessarily reflect growth in household incomes
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The $1.90/day poverty line also has problems:
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Based on overall prices in the economy, not prices of essential goods
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So it may change what is considered "poverty" over time
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The graph starts in 1820, missing previous centuries of capitalist history and primitive accumulation
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Robert Allen provides alternative poverty estimates suggesting:
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England had low poverty rates even during feudalism
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India's poverty around 1600 may have been only 5-10%
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Indian poverty rose under British colonialism
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Three Issues with the Standard Narrative
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Extreme poverty does not seem to be the natural state for humanity
- Historical real wages often allowed survival above $1.90/day
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Rise of capitalism initially caused immiseration, not progress
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Incorporation into capitalist system associated with:
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Declines in real wages
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Deterioration in heights
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Increases in mortality
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Progress occurred centuries after rise of capitalism
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In Europe's core, only from 1880s
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In periphery, only from mid-20th century
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Analysis of Real Wages, Heights, and Mortality Since 1500s
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Examines trends in 5 regions: Europe, Latin America, Africa, South Asia, China
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Europe
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Real wages
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Allowed survival above extreme poverty line for centuries
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Declined with rise of capitalism in 16th century
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Only improved from 1880s
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Heights
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Declined from 16th to 19th century
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Recovered in 20th century
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Mortality
- Famines increased under early capitalism
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Latin America
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Real wages
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Not in extreme poverty except during catastrophes
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Declined with colonialism in 18th century
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Recovered in mid-20th century
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Heights
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Declined in 18th century
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Recovered mid-20th century
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Mortality
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Genocide and collapse after conquest
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Possibly rise in mortality in late 19th century
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Africa
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Real wages
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Above poverty line in 18th century
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Declined with slave trade and colonialism
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Recovered mid-20th century
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Heights
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Decline under colonialism
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Still not recovered in many countries
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Mortality
- Increased under colonialism
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South Asia
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Real wages
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Above poverty line before colonialism
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Declined under British rule
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Little recovery
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Heights
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Decline under colonialism
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Little recovery except in Sri Lanka
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Mortality
- Marked increase under British rule
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China
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Real wages
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Decline after Opium Wars
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Recovered under communism in 20th century
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Heights
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Decline after Opium Wars
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Recovery under communism
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Mortality
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Increase after Opium Wars
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Rapid progress under communism
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Conclusions
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Extreme poverty does not seem to be natural state
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Rise of capitalism caused immiseration, not progress against poverty
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Progress occurred centuries after rise of capitalism
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Where progress occurred, it correlated with progressive social movements and public provisioning, not capitalism
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Capitalism has failed to deliver universal progress against extreme poverty
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Hundreds of millions still live in conditions akin to worst periods of history