The Persistent Effects of Peru's Mining Mita
City University of Hong Kong · Chinese University of Hong Kong · +2 more institutions
Abstract
This study utilizes regression discontinuity to examine the long-run impacts of the mita, an extensive forced mining labor system in effect in Peru and Bolivia between 1573 and 1812. Results indicate that a mita effect lowers household consumption by around 25% and increases the prevalence of stunted growth in children by around 6 percentage points in subjected districts today. Using data from the Spanish Empire and Peruvian Republic to trace channels of institutional persistence, I show that the mita's influence has persisted through its impacts on land tenure and public goods provision. Mita districts historically had fewer large landowners and lower educational attainment. Today, they are less integrated…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 76.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 0
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Regression discontinuity design
- Subsistence agriculture
- Educational attainment
- Empire
- Consumption (sociology)
- Economics
- Demographic economics
- Geography
- Decent work and economic growth