According to research summarized by economists Nicholas Bloom and John Van Reenen, firm management practices differ widely between countries. The differences between well-managed firms and poorly managed firms are significant and could help explain differences in Total Factor Productivity (TFP) between countries. In the field of economic history, economists Louis Putterman and David N. Weil (henceforth P&W) found that the length of time that a population of a country has lived with a centralized state and with settled agriculture (henceforth, Deep Roots) are powerful predictors of their GDP per capita today. Perhaps there is a relationship between firm management practices by country and that country’s Deep Roots.
P&W tested their Deep Root’s hypothesis by creating a matrix of contemporary populations of each country based on their population’s ancestral origin in the year 1500. They use a variable called state history that measures how long a country has lived under a supra-tribal government, the geographic scope of that government, and whether locals or a foreign power controlled it. Their second variable is agricultural history, and it measures the number of millennia that have passed since a country transitioned from hunting and gathering to agriculture. P&W then combined the matrices of ancestry with the Deep Roots variables to show how long a centralized state governed each national origin group and how long they had settled agriculture. The Deep Roots score varies dramatically between peoples and locations. P&W’s findings contrast those that explain economic development and GDP per capita as the ultimate result of geography, institutions, or other conventional explanations.
Ryan Murphy and Alex Nowrasteh tested whether the Deep Roots variables can explain differing GDP per capita by U.S. state in a paper published in the Journal of Bioeconomics (working paper available here). They found that P&W’s core result of a statistically significant and positive relationship between Deep Roots variables and GDP per capita does not hold at the subnational level in the United States. This argument is related to immigration because new immigrants bring different state history and agricultural history scores with them, eventually affecting the Deep Roots of their new country. Whether that matters for economic growth is up for debate.
Since Deep Roots are correlated with GDP per capita globally and some economists think they can explain economic development, firm management practices should also be correlated with Deep Roots. We ran simple linear OLS regressions testing the relationship between firm management practices and a country’s state and agricultural history to test this. Our standard errors are robust to heteroskedasticity. We controlled for the same variables that P&W did, as well as the economic freedom score. We downloaded the firm management practices dataset for 34 countries here.
We found nothing interesting related to the Deep Roots (Table 1). Neither state history nor agricultural history are correlated with better management practices. However, economic freedom and absolute latitude are positively correlated with state history and agricultural history. On the positive side, our R‑squared is 0.72, so the variables we included can explain 72 percent of the variation.
There are a lot of reasons why this could be. We only had management score data for 34 countries, collinearity was rampant, cross sections were limited, and other explanations that we haven’t considered. Regardless, we found no evidence here that there is a link between Deep Roots and firm management practices.
This substack is based on a blog post that originally appeared at Cato-At-Liberty.