Interpersonal Diversity and Socioeconomic Disparities Across Populations: A Reply to Rosenberg and Kang
Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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Interpersonal Diversity and Socioeconomic Disparities Across Populations : A Reply to Rosenberg and Kang. / Ashraf, Quamrul H.; Galor, Oded; Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag.
2018.Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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TY - UNPB
T1 - Interpersonal Diversity and Socioeconomic Disparities Across Populations
T2 - A Reply to Rosenberg and Kang
AU - Ashraf, Quamrul H.
AU - Galor, Oded
AU - Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - "The exploration of the impact of the prehistoric migration of anatomically modern humans from Africa on comparative economic development has been the focus of a vibrant research agenda in the past decade. This influential literature has attracted the attention of scholars from other disciplines, and in light of existing methodological gaps across fields, it has perhaps unsurprisingly generated some significant misconceptions. In particular, Rosenberg and Kang (2015) suggest that the hump-shaped effect of interpersonal population diversity on population density in the year 1500 is statistically insignificant in an extended sample of genetic diversity that was released more recently. Unfortunately, this assertion is based on elementary statistical errors. In fact, the hump-shaped effect of diversity on population density is even more pronounced in this extended sample of Pemberton et al. (2013), and it is present not only in the year 1500 but over the entire precolonial period for which population data are available (i.e., the 10,000BCE to 1500CE timeframe)."
AB - "The exploration of the impact of the prehistoric migration of anatomically modern humans from Africa on comparative economic development has been the focus of a vibrant research agenda in the past decade. This influential literature has attracted the attention of scholars from other disciplines, and in light of existing methodological gaps across fields, it has perhaps unsurprisingly generated some significant misconceptions. In particular, Rosenberg and Kang (2015) suggest that the hump-shaped effect of interpersonal population diversity on population density in the year 1500 is statistically insignificant in an extended sample of genetic diversity that was released more recently. Unfortunately, this assertion is based on elementary statistical errors. In fact, the hump-shaped effect of diversity on population density is even more pronounced in this extended sample of Pemberton et al. (2013), and it is present not only in the year 1500 but over the entire precolonial period for which population data are available (i.e., the 10,000BCE to 1500CE timeframe)."
M3 - Working paper
T3 - RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
BT - Interpersonal Diversity and Socioeconomic Disparities Across Populations
ER -
ID: 214644586