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Long-term barriers to the diffusion of innovations

8 July 2011
San Micheletto - Via S. Micheletto 3 (Classroom 6 )
We document an empirical relationship between the cross-country adoption of technologies and the degree of long-term historical relatedness between human populations. Historical relatedness is measured using genetic distance, a measure of the time since two populations’ last common ancestors. We find that the measure of human relatedness that is relevant to explain technology adoption is not the simple genetic distance between populations, but genetic distance relative to the world technological frontier. This evidence is consistent with long term historical relatedness acting as a barrier to technology adoption: societies that are more distant from the technological frontier tend to face higher imitation costs. The results can help explain current differences in total factor productivity and income per capita across countries.
Units: 
LIME;ICES