physorg | Although Europe represents only about 8 percent of the planet's
landmass, from 1492 to 1914, Europeans conquered or colonized more than
80 percent of the entire world. Being dominated for centuries has led to
lingering inequality and long-lasting effects in many formerly
colonized countries, including poverty and slow economic growth. There
are many possible explanations for why history played out this way, but
few can explain why the West was so powerful for so long.
Caltech's Philip Hoffman, the Rea A. and Lela G. Axline Professor
of Business Economics and professor of history, has a new explanation:
the advancement of gunpowder technology. The Chinese invented gunpowder,
but Hoffman, whose work applies economic theory to historical contexts,
argues that certain political and economic circumstances allowed the
Europeans to advance gunpowder technology at an unprecedented
rate—allowing a relatively small number of people to quickly take over
much of the rest of the globe.
Hoffman's work is published in a new book titled Why Did Europe Conquer the World? We spoke with him recently about his research interests and what led him to study this particular topic.
You have been on the Caltech faculty for more than 30 years. Are there any overarching themes to your work?
Over the years I've been interested in a number of different things,
and this new work puts together a lot of bits of my research. I've
looked at changes in technology that influence agriculture, and I've
studied the development of financial markets, and in between those two, I
was also studying why financial crises occur. I've also been interested
in the development of tax systems. For example, how did states get the
ability to impose heavy taxes? What were the politics and the political
context of the economy that resulted in this ability to tax?
What led you to investigate the global conquests of western Europe?
It's just fascinating. In 1914, really only China, Japan, and the
Ottoman Empire had escaped becoming European colonies. A thousand years
ago, no one would have ever expected that result, for at that point
western Europe was hopelessly backward. It was politically weak, it was
poor, and the major long-distance commerce was a slave trade led by
Vikings. The political dominance of western Europe was an unexpected
outcome and had really big consequences, so I thought: let's explain it.
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