One way to look at the relative wealth of the United States
over that of its neighbor Mexico would be to say that the US has a surplus of
at least one of the three factors of production. We can say there’s better and
more land, more and better trained people, and even that it has more capital
stock built up that is also more productive. Another might throw in entrepreneurship
but that may be too much like a black box and much harder to quantify. To me,
that is one of those ex-post rationalizations you use when you have nothing
else to point at.
But if we want to look at what makes the country to the
north richer there are many other factors that we can look at. We have to look
not just at one point in time but to the flow of history.
One is to go look at the strength of the institutions like Acemoglu
and Robinson speak of. In this framework, the stronger the institutions, like
the rule of law in the judiciary, the stronger and wealthier the nation no
matter the economic system. So we can point to American fealty to the
Constitution over the last 250 years and not matter how flawed the document is,
its very constancy has allowed consistency that has not been available in
Mexico with its one-time occupation by French forces and having its revolution
100 years ago and then generations of one party rule.
Another way would be to look at the way the flora and fauna
of the countries developed. In a theory popularized by Jared Diamond, the
layouts of the continent really matter. The US is much broader from shore to
shore than Mexico and at the right latitudes that the weather was more like the
weather in the vast Eurasian continent. The plants and animals that evolved on
the larger continent faced more pressure and competition so what survived there
was stronger and more well adapted. Many of the hardy plants and animals that
were foreign invaders on the North American shores helped human development and
were more suited to the United States. Alternately, there were bacteria that
came over too that had negative effects on the population. The cold American
winters could shorten the life span of the more deadly tropical diseases that
could find their victims in central and southern Mexico.
Geography and history over time had its hands in different
aspects. As a British colony, the various colonies could take on the technology
of the mother country right at the beginning of the industrial revolution. It
didn’t have to lead because industrial capitalism was developing over the Atlantic.
Once the revolution was over policy was put in place to protect the young independent
country’s producers from foreign competition in infant industry protection –
and protecting intellectual property with patents and copyrights while not
doing the same for borrowed tech. The early states were split. In the north
there were crisscrossing waterways that provided the motive power for the new
factories. IN the south there were fertile fields producing tobacco, sorghum,
rice, and cotton.
You can’t ignore history if you want to ask why the US is
richer than Mexico. You can’t ignore that in 1848, US troops were in Mexico
City and expropriating a third of that country’s territories. These lands
spread from Texas to California which are now two of the most productive states
in the United States. You also can’t ignore the entrepreneurship and
inventiveness that led to the cotton gin, but you can’t turn a blind eye to the
use that that fertile southern land was put to. We have to reconcile that a lot
of the wealth generated in the US for its first third of its existence was
through the institution of chattel slavery. On the eve of the civil war, there
were more millionaires in Charleston than in New York City.
There was a great war, one of the first to kill on an
industrial level – and though it remains the worst war in US history, the rest
of the world took it as an example and killed more efficiently. But for those
both countries were protected in their sovereignty by two vast oceans. Since
the last world war the US has developed from the technology boost of the war
and the ensuing cold war. Mexico did not invest those resources and the
difference. It is hard to pinpoint where they diverged, but you can’t ignore
that the US GDP is thirteen times the size of the Mexican economy. If you ran
back history, could you run it so that Mexico would develop into the stronger
economy? How far back would you go?
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