Income and Inequality in the Aztec Empire on the Eve of the Spanish Conquest
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Guido Alfani, Bocconi University
Version: View help for Version V2
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Project Citation:
Alfani, Guido. Income and Inequality in the Aztec Empire on the Eve of the Spanish Conquest . Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2023-03-15. https://doi.org/10.3886/E186521V2
Project Description
Summary:
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Today, Latin American countries are
characterized by relatively high levels of economic inequality. This
circumstance has often been considered a long-run consequence of the Conquest
and of the highly extractive institutions imposed by the colonizers. We show
that, in the case of the Aztec Empire, high inequality predates the Spanish Conquest.
We reach this conclusion by estimating levels of income inequality and of
imperial extraction across the Empire. We find that the richest 1% earned 41.8% of the total
income, while the income share of the poorest 50% was just 23.3%. We also argue that those provinces
which had resisted the Aztec expansion suffered from relatively harsh
conditions, including higher taxes, in the context of the imperial system – and
were the first to rebel, allying themselves with the Spaniards. After the Spanish-Aztec
War, the colonial elites inherited pre-existing extractive institutions, and
added additional layers of social and economic inequality.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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Income inequality;
Aztec Empire;
preindustrial societies;
empires;
inequality extraction;
social tables
Geographic Coverage:
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Central America (Aztec Empire)
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