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Title: Transparency, Appropriability and the Early State

Author(s): Joram Mayshar, Omer Moav and Zvika Neeman

Publication Date: August 2011

Keyword(s): Appropriability, Institutions, Land Tenure, The Early State and Transparency

Programme Area(s): International Macroeconomics and Public Economics

Abstract: We propose a general theory that explains the extent of the state and accounts for related institutions as byproducts of the state's extractive technology. We posit further that this extractive technology is determined by the transparency of the production technology. This theory is applied to examine two principal phases in the evolution of the early state. First, we argue that the common explanation of the emergence of the state as a consequence of the availability of food surplus due to the Neolithic Revolution is flawed, since it ignores Malthusian considerations. In contrast, we suggest that what led to the emergence of the state was a transformation of the tax technology that was induced by the greater transparency of the new farming technology. We then apply our theory to explain key institutional features that distinguished ancient Egypt from ancient Mesopotamia, and, in particular, to explain their different land tenure regimes.

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Bibliographic Reference

Mayshar, J, Moav, O and Neeman, Z. 2011. 'Transparency, Appropriability and the Early State'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=8548