How the social organization of Europe and China shaped their divergent
economic and political trajectories over the past millennium In the
eleventh century, when Europe was still backward and poor, China was a
rich and sophisticated civilization. Yet Europe became the birthplace
of democracy and the Industrial Revolution, driving the Great
Enrichment, while China stagnated until the end of the twentieth
century and was always ruled by autocracies. Two Paths to Prosperity
traces the emergence of two very different social organizations in
premodern China and Europe—the clan and the corporation—showing
how they were key factors in the economic and political divergence of
these two great civilizations. In this landmark book, three leading
economists offer a bold new account of why Europe and China evolved
along such different trajectories. In the early Middle Ages, public
goods like risk sharing, religious worship, education, and conflict
resolution were provided by nonstate organizations in both societies.
China increasingly relied on kin-based cooperation within clans, while
weaker kinship ties in Europe gave rise to corporations such as
guilds, universities, and self-governing towns. Despite performing
similar functions, clans and corporations were built on very different
principles—with lasting consequences until today. Providing a novel
answer to a fundamental question in economic and political history,
Two Paths to Prosperity shows how extended kinship in Chinese society
facilitated the consolidation of autocracy and hindered innovation and
economic development, and how corporations in Europe influenced
emerging state institutions and set the stage for the Industrial
Revolution.
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Culture and Institutions in Europe and China, 1000–2000
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691267715
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok