Tan: I want to just touch on these economic, sorry, the cultural traits that you talk about. Ar e, in book, am the ontrpenerial spirit, future orientated mind set. There's something peculiar about the european trade which other areas of the world are not happi i wouldn't define this a european troat. Tan: Is that across the globe, and within each continent in the globe, those societies that were originated from places where the return to agricultural investment are higher than otherwise is more long term oyented.
Oded Galor’s remarkable new book, The Journey of Humanity, can feel like seeing the world with fresh eyes. His analysis of the origins of wealth and inequality is compelling, original and, especially during these troubled times, refreshingly optimistic. Speaking across the political divide the book sets out a convincing blueprint for how a better life can be had by everyone on the planet. Galor, an economist at Brown University, upends many of our assumptions about human progress. For nearly all of human history humans lived a subsistence existence but something astonishing happened 200 years ago and the living standards of nearly all humans have skyrocketed – albeit unevenly – since then. Hosting the discussion is journalist, author and former BBC News Editorial Director, Kamal Ahmed.
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