bradford-delong.com/2020/09/briefl…
Willem Jongman (2006): Gibbon Was Right: þe Decline & Fall of þe Roman Economy github.com/braddelong/pub…: ‘Imagine a pre-industrial and largely agricultural economy in a fairly stable equilibrium. Next that equilibrium is disturbed by catastrophic... 1/
Jongman (cont.): ... mortality: what do we expect to happen when the proportion between people and assets changes?… Prices and wages rose quite dramatically in the wake of the Antonine Plague… [and] the coinage itself began its slide into substantial debasement... 2/
Jongman (cont.): ...Theoretically, there was no need for that. The money stock was large, and by now even too large…
...The reason must have been the needs of the state. It had become difficult to collect taxes in the turmoil of the day, precisely when the state also... 3/
Jongman (cont.): ...had to finance huge military efforts…. The biggest economic and social change, however, was to the land-labour ratio…. Production per man hour must have gone up…. Conversely, rents [should] have gone down…. The Roman Empire should have turned into a... 4/
Jongman (cont.): ...world of happy and prosperous peasants, and much greater social equality…. Theory is impeccable….
Reality was, of course, different…. What we witness from the late second century is the emergence of a new social, political and legal regime, where... 5/
Jongman (cont.): ...oppression replaces the entitlements of citizenship…honestiores and humiliores…. Demand for slaves declined because citizens could now be exploited more fully…. Rome debased the value of citizenship and followed the same route that Prussian Junkers... 6/
Jongman (cont.): ...were to follow during the so-called second serfdom…. The coloni of the Saltus Burunitanus of 180 were not alone to complain to the emperor about increased oppression and growing abuse. When pushed hard enough, they could have moved, but that was... 7/
Jongman (cont.): ...precisely what was to become illegal. Tied to the land, they lost their powers in the market…. The declining legal status of citizens was… an instrument imposed in the face of what would have been an improved economic position for the peasantry if the... 8/
Jongman (cont.): ...market would have had its way.
This change in social relations is also reflected culturally. The late second century was a period of important cultural changes… Mithraism… Christianity… new forms of belonging and a sociability that no longer... 9/
Jongman (cont.): ...depended on civic life or patronal benevolence….
For me, the interesting thing is the resilience of the Roman state. For more than half a century, the Severan regime maintained the integrity and continuit …. The surprise is not that it finally... 10/
Jongman (cont.): ...collapsed, but that it survived… for so long that the crisis later became known as the crisis of the third century, rather than… of the second century…. Just as remarkable as the temporary Severan recovery is the recovery from Diocletian [which]... 11/
Jongman (cont.): ...also generated a measure of economic recovery… substantial enough for late antique economic decline to be dramatic.
The real beginnings of that decline and fall, however, may have been in the beginning of a period of much colder and dryer weather, and... 12/
Jongman (cont.): ...in the scourge of the Antonine Plague. With the growth of its Empire, with the growth of its cities, and with the growth of a system of government and transportation based on those cities, Rome had created the perhaps most prosperous and successful... 13/
Jongman (cont.): ...pre-industrial economy in history. The age of Antoninus Pius was indeed probably the best age to live in pre-industrial history. 14/END
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