What is it about?
We estimate economic growth from changes in house sizes through time, and economic inequality by degree of difference in size among contemporaneous houses. By these measures we find almost continual, but slow, growth on worldwide scales and a general trend towards increasing inequality. However, when we examine particular regions we see that both inequality and growth display a great deal of variability through time. This variability is related to large-scale economic changes (such as the widespread availability of iron and the growth of central-place hierarchies) and to major changes in political economy and climate.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
Economic growth and inequality have long been thought to be affected by major technological changes such as the development of agriculture, bronze, and iron. Here we assess these claims rigorously and systematically. We find that other factors, especially the development of land scarcity and the appearance of hierarchical settlement systems with size differentiation among settlements, strongly support these technological changes. Larger settlements rewire human social networks, support specialization, and increase economic production at rates that likely exceed population growth.
Perspectives
As archaeological research grows, our methods improve, and our dating becomes more precise, we're finding that many classic problems in economic history—such as the relationship between growth and inequality—can be addressed with archaeological data. Here we present and assess growth and inequality on global scales via a new database of archaeological house sizes from many portions of the world.
Tim Kohler
Washington State University
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Kuznets at -7000: Is there a really long-term relationship between growth and inequality?, Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, April 2026, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.strueco.2026.01.007.
You can read the full text:
Resources
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







