Surplus and Survial. Risk, Ruin, and Luxury in the Evolution of Early Forms of Subsistence

Abstract

In their search for "primitive man", anthropologists of the 1970s constructed an "original affluent society" in the Stone Age, when peopele led a life of leisure and relative superabundance embedded in the harmonies of nature. These early subsistences economies have been reconstructed as based on principles of risk minimization and leisure preference. Here, we show that risk minimization is just one element in a wider spectrum of coping with risks and the danger of ruin. In subsistence economies, long-term survival requires a broad spectrum of different behavioral patterns. In situation of scarcity or danger, the acceptance of calculated risks can increase the chance of survival per saltum. Under less extreme conditions, risk prevention by portfolio formation is generally more effective as a strategy to reduce fluctuation. Risk prevention can finally be made more profitable by suitable technological management of fluctuations. Thus, a risk spiral as a dynamizing principle in the development of complex societies is generated: The reduction of a particular risk leads to new types of uncertainity, which in turns require further (risky) innovations. This mechanism creates a permanent innovation pressure responsible for the restless transformation in complex societies.

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