Regular ArticleOn the Puzzling Cycle in the Biological Standard of Living: The Case of Antebellum Georgia☆
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2021, Journal of Comparative EconomicsCitation Excerpt :Although the large and negative coefficient for peasant colonies may be somewhat unexpected—owing to the higher participation of African smallholders in agricultural production and their larger share of land relative to that of African farmers in settler colonies—this result might bear some similarities to processes occurring elsewhere. Although the context was drastically different, Craig (2016, p. 17, see also Coclanis and Komlos, 1995; Komlos et al., 1995) observes that, in line with our evidence, independent farmers in North America experienced the largest decline in height. Similar to the African decline, this also took place in the context of the market integration of previously more subsistence-oriented agricultural economies: before the mid-19th century, North American farmers provided a very protein-rich diet to their children.
Shrinking in a growing economy is not so puzzling after all
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2017, Structural Change and Economic DynamicsCitation Excerpt :They did not choose their consumption bundle themselves. In other words, their nutritional status had a different dynamic, a different internal logic, inasmuch as it depended on efficiency wage considerations (Komlos and Coclanis, 1997, p. 452; Rees et al., 2003). In short, slaves were not integrated into the money economy; hence, they were not exposed to the vagaries of food-price fluctuations.
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2015, HOMO- Journal of Comparative Human BiologyCitation Excerpt :For example, enumerators recorded inmates’ ethnic status in a complexion category. African-Americans were recorded as black, light-black, dark-black, and various shades of mulatto (Komlos and Coclanis, 1997). Whites were recorded as light, medium, dark, fair, and white.
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John, KomlosJoerg, Baten, Eds.