YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
Does Land Abundance Explain African Institutions? James Fenske November 2009 I show how abundant land and scarce labor
shaped African institutions before colonial rule. I present a model in which exogenous
suitability of the land for agriculture and endogenously evolving population determine the
existence of land rights, slavery, and polygyny. I then use crosssectional data on
pre-colonial African societies to demonstrate that, consistent with the model, the
existence of land rights, slavery, and polygyny occurred in those parts of Africa that
were the most suitable for agriculture, and in which population density was greatest.
Next, I use the model to explain institutions among the Egba of southwestern Nigeria from
1830 to 1914. While many Egba institutions were typical of a land-abundant environment,
they sold land and had disputes over it. These exceptions were the result of a period of
land scarcity when the Egba first arrived at Abeokuta and of heterogeneity in the quality
of land. Keywords: Africa, Institutions, Land rights, Slavery, Polygyny. JEL Classification: N57, O10. |