From Worship to Worldly Pleasures: Secularisation and Long-Run Economic Growth

Starts: Wednesday 17 April 2013 2:00 pm
Ends: Wednesday 17 April 2013 3:00 pm
Event type Seminar
Location MJ117
Presented by: Holger Strulik (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)

In medieval times, most people identified with religious values and aggregate income and productivity grew at glacier speed. In the 20th century, religion played a much lesser role in daily life and income and productivity grew at high and unprecedented rates. The present paper develops a simple economic theory of identity choice that explains both stylised facts as well as a period of secularisation during which an increasing share of the population abandons religious identity for worldly pleasures and aggregate productivity takes off. An extension of the basic model investigates the Protestant reformation as an intermediate stage. Another extension introduces socially-dependent religious preferences, establishes the endogenous emergence of multiple, self-fulfilling equilibria, and demonstrates how a social multiplier amplifies the speed of transition.

  

Contact details

Name: Dr. Russ Moro
Email: Russ.Moro@brunel.ac.uk

Page last updated: Tuesday 05 March 2013