
What have the Romans ever done for us?
10 Nov 2018 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, development economics, economic history, growth disasters, growth miracles Tags: economics of colonialism, Roman empire

Early Christian Schisms – Before Imperium – Extra History – #1
06 Nov 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of religion Tags: Roman empire
Ten Minute History – The Fall of Rome (Short Documentary)
11 Sep 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: Roman empire
Roman Army Supply Lines and Logistics (Overview)
30 Jun 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economic history Tags: Roman empire
The Ancient Roman Helmet’s evolution explained
06 Jun 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economic history Tags: Roman empire
The Truth About Ancient Gladiators
12 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of media and culture, health and safety, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, sports economics Tags: Roman empire
The First Punic War
13 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economic history Tags: Roman empire
Why the Romans profited from their empire but the British did not from India
19 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, defence economics, development economics, economic history, international economics, movies, Public Choice Tags: age of empires, British empire, colonialism, India. Monty Python, Roman empire
The British did not develop India because that would made it a worthwhile prize for another to steal. Rome face no serious rivals so we could take a long-term view on investing in colonies.
A prosperous colony is an attractive colony to conquer so imperial army and navy resources would have deployed to defending it. Prosperous locals and locally recruited troops can switch loyalties.
An empire full of prosperous colonies makes you an attractive target for other European powers to gang up on and divide the spoils. This may explain why some colonial powers had mixed feelings about developing their colonies. Robert Lucas observed that:
Stagnation at income levels slightly above subsistence is the state of traditional agricultural societies anywhere and any time. But neither did the modern imperialisms—the British included—alter or improve incomes for more than small elites and some European settlers and administrators…
The main economic event of the late 20th century was this diffusion of the Industrial Revolution to non-European societies (begun in Japan half a century earlier), a diffusion that will surely continue throughout the 21st century. A central question is why it did not begin much earlier, during the colonial period, at the same time that the Industrial Revolution was spreading throughout Europe.
France lost its once vast North American colonies through wars. Many colonies changed hands after the countless European wars as part of peace settlements.
Australia was first colonised in 1788 as a penal colony. Very expensive to do, but the British did fill-up the only valuable part – Sydney harbour – with 60,000 mainly riffraff and low life.
This penal colony for a number of decades made the only valuable part of Australia more unattractive to other European powers to conquer. Doug Allen explains:
In the case of Australia, the hypothesis might appear silly. How much reduction in the first-best value to a continent can come from 60,000 convicts?
However, one must keep in mind that the only value of Australia at the end of the eighteenth century was from Sydney Harbour, Norfolk Island, and a few other strategic locations.
On these margins, the convicts could lower the value considerably … After the War of 1812 Britain realized the strategic significance of Bermuda and subsequently established a penal colony there.
Deirdre McCloskey pointed out that by the middle of the 19th century, British traded with India with few opportunities for exploitation. What was the price of that?
The cost of protecting the Empire devolved almost entirely on the British people. (A century earlier the British had likewise paid for the defense of the first empire, in what is now the United States; the colonials refused to pay as little as a small tax on tea for imperial defense.)
British taxpayers 1877-1948 paid for the half of naval expenditure that was for imperial defense, a by no means negligible part of total British national income each year. They paid for the Boer War. They paid for the imperial portions of World Wars I and especially II. They paid for protection of Jamaican sugar in the 18th century and protection for British engineering firms in India in the 19th. They paid and paid and paid.
What were the vaunted benefits to the British people? Essentially nothing of material worth. Bananas on their kitchen tables that they would have got anyway by free trade. Employment for unemployable twits from minor public schools. The joy of seeing a quarter of the land area on world maps and globes printed in red. Economically, it did not matter. Public education mattered a great deal more to British economic growth, as did a tradition of industrial and financial innovation, and a free society in which to prosper…
Rich countries are rich mainly because of what they do at home, not because of foreign trade, foreign investment, foreign empire, past or present.
The History of the Romans: Every Year
09 Apr 2017 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: Roman empire
The Roman Empire at its height in 117AD, under Emperor Trajan
23 Nov 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: Roman empire
Animated History of the Roman Empire 510 BC – 1453 AD
05 Sep 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics Tags: maps, Roman empire
Trade Routes of The Roman Empire in 180AD
15 Feb 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: Roman empire
Watch the Eastern Roman Empire become the Byzantine Empire.
28 Dec 2015 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: Roman empire
Roads of the Roman Empire
25 Sep 2015 Leave a comment
in economic history, transport economics Tags: Roman empire
Roads of the Roman Empire
– http://t.co/o0dU4dyF71—
Amazing Maps (@Amazing_Maps) July 14, 2015


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