On the Origin of Religious Values: Does Italian Weather Affect Individualism in Bolivia?
Lewis Davis ()
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Lewis Davis: Union College, Department of Economics, 807 Union Street, Schenectady, NY, USA
Journal of Economics, Management and Religion (JEMAR), 2021, vol. 02, issue 02, 1-38
Abstract:
In this paper, I advance and empirically support the indigenous religious values hypothesis, which holds that religions espouse values indigenous to the countries in which they developed. To identify the indigenous values of a religion’s homeland, I rely on the negative relationship between individualism and rainfall variation. I find strong empirical support for the hypothesis that contemporary individualism depends on rainfall variation in the homelands of religions to which a country’s population adheres. Indeed, this relationship explains over a quarter of the international variation in individualism. This effect is robust to controls for the role of religion in institutional and technological transfers and the confluence of conversion and colonisation. In keeping with the explicitly religious nature of the mechanism proposed here, I also find that rainfall variation in religion homelands plays a greater role in explaining the values of countries with greater religious freedom and the values of individuals who are more religious or members of religious minorities.
Keywords: Religion; cultural values; individualism; climate; colonisation; rainfall (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wsi:jemarx:v:02:y:2021:i:02:n:s2737436x21500072
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DOI: 10.1142/S2737436X21500072
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