For thousands of years, any technological advance that increased food production only led to a larger population, not a higher standard of living.
In this world, events that reduced population (like the Black Death) temporarily raised living standards for survivors, while "good" things like peace and stability could actually lower per capita income by increasing population density. The Breakout: "Survival of the Richest" Gregory_Clark - A_Farewell_to_Alms.pdf
Gregory Clark’s (2007) is a seminal yet controversial work that attempts to explain why the Industrial Revolution happened when and where it did. Core Argument: The Malthusian Trap For thousands of years, any technological advance that
Clark argues that before 1800, humanity lived in a : Core Argument: The Malthusian Trap Clark argues that
The average person in 1800 was no better off—and possibly worse off—than a hunter-gatherer from 100,000 BC.
Clark’s most controversial claim is that the Industrial Revolution was driven by rather than just institutions or geography. A Farewell to Alms: - Economics