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A d e e l M a l i k
U n i v e r s i t y o f O x f o r d
S y e d N a d e e m H u s s a i n
F o r m e r l y S t . C r o s s C o l l e g e , O x f o r d
L U M S S e m i n a r 2 9 J a n 2 0 1 7
THE GEOGRAPHY OF CANAL COLONIZATION
IMPLICATIONS FOR POLITICAL ECONOMY
Details of Archival Research
Primary sources:
The Punjab Government General Administration Report (1850)
Report of the Indian Irrigation Commission (1903)
District Gazetteers , Census Report of Punjab 1921
The Punjab Colony Manuals of 1922, 1924 and 1936
Board of Revenue Reports; and Returns of the Agricultural Statistics of India
Report of the Indian Irrigation Commission (1903)
Other sources
Personal correspondences, notes and general remarks, replies to printed questions etc. by high ranking British officials who were in charge of canal colonization
Punjab Colony Manuals
Report of the Indian Irrigation Commission (1903), and Ali (1988).
Secondary sources:
These include some pioneering work done by-
Paul W. Paustian (1930)
M. L. Darling (1928)
Imran Ali (1988),
Farmer (1974),
Stone (1984)
Canals in historical context
Pre-British developments:
Three principal modes of irrigation that preceded the British canal irrigation.
Wells – old means of irrigation;
Persian Wheel - in use from the medieval Slave and Mughal dynasties;
Inundation canals – They depended on water levels in rivers for their flow, making them useful only during flood periods.
Main feature
Water supply fluctuated with flood cycles in successive years.
Examples of earlier canals
Some of the prominent pre-British irrigation canals included:
Western Jumna canal in east Punjab - built by Feroz Shah Tughlak
Huslee canal - built by Nawab Ali Khan at the orders of Emperor Shah Jahan in
1633.
Canals in Multan built by Diwan Sawan Mal, governor of Multan under Sikh
rule.
Canals built in Dera Ghazi Khan and Muzzafargarh districts.
Canal Irrigation under the British
Canal irrigation 1849-1880:
British canal irrigation activity started in the year 1817 and was restricted to the plains north of Delhi and the deltaic Madras region.
Most of the early British canal irrigation schemes were directed towards rehabilitating, restoring and extending existing schemes.
In 1849-1850 a canal irrigation scheme was conceived to water the area previously irrigated by the Huslee canal in Baree Doab (land between Beas and Ravi rivers)
It was described as ‘politically important’ not only because of the economic benefit but also because it was a means to provide work to the disbanded and immobilized Sikh soldiers from the Anglo-Sikh war.
Canal Irrigation after 1880
This was followed in 1868, by Sirhind Canal which took off from Sutlej River and irrigated a vast area between Sutlej and Jumna rivers
Convinced about its profitability from earlier experiences, the British vigorously pursued canal irrigation as a state policy after 1880.
This policy was different from the earlier phase in two respects:
- A more elaborate and dense network of large perennial canals was laid down.
- New canals were not only constructed but also colonized with people.
Canal Colony Doab District Tract Period of colonization
Type of land grantees/grants
Sidhnai Canal Sidhnai Bari Doab Multan B 1886-1888 Self-cultivators,Rich peasants
Lower Sohag Para Canal Sohag Para Bari Doab Montgomery B 1886-1888 Self-cultivators,Rich peasants
Upper Bari Doab Canal Chunian Bari Doab Lahore C 1896-18981904-1906
Peasants,Civil granteesMilitary grantees
Lower Chenab Canal Chenab Rechna Doab Gujaranwala,Jhang,Lyallpur,Lahore,Sheikhpura
CBBCC
1892-19051926-1930
Peasants,Yeoman grantees,Capitalist grantees.
Lower Jhelum Canal Jhelum Jech Doab Shahpur,
Jhang
B
B
1902-1906 Horse/Mule Breeding
grantees,
Lower Bari Doab Canal Lower Bari Doab Bari Doab Montgomery,
Multan
B
B
1914-1924 Horse breeding grantees,
Military personnel
Upper Chenab Canal Upper Chenab Rechna Doab Gujaranwala, Sialkot,
Sheikhpura
C
A
C
1915-1919 Compensatory grants,
Civil grants,
Military grants
Upper Jhelum Canal Upper Jhelum Jech Doab Gujarat C 1916-1921 Compensatory grants,
Forest plantation,
Preferential allotment.
Sutlej Valley Project Nili Bar Bari Doab Montgomery,
Multan
B
B
1926-1940 All the above mentioned
except military grants.
Irrigation levels in Punjab
0
2000000
4000000
6000000
8000000
10000000
12000000
14000000
Govt canals Private canals Total area of cropsirrigated
1884-85
1924-25
Source: Agricultural Statistics of India 1884-1884; 1924-1925, Department of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics, Central Publication Branch, Calcutta, (1886; 1927)
The Geography of Canal Colonization
Three geographic drivers of canal colonization
Archival evidence suggests the relevance of three core aspects of geography:
a) Location- Punjab had an ideal location as it lay just beneath the foot hills of the Himalayas, Karakorum and Suleiman ranges. Its political geography also made it strategically important for the British.
b) Climate- Rainfall was a key climatic factor determining the need and impact of canal irrigation.
c) Topography- The topography of Punjab also made it highly conducive for canal colonization.
Punjab’s geographic suitability for irrigation - I
“The capabilities of the Punjab for canal irrigation are notorious. It is intersected by great rivers; it is bounded on two sides by hills, whence pour down countless rivulets; the general surface of the land slopes southward with a considerable gradient. These facts at once proclaim it to be a country eminently adapted for canals.”
─ (General report on the administration on Punjab 1849-50, 1854)
Punjab’s geographic suitability for irrigation - II
The Report of the Indian Irrigation Commission 1901-1903 reinforced Punjab’s geographical suitability for canal irrigation, differentiating it from the rest of India as the most conducive province for extensive canal networks.
“The first province visited by us, the Punjab or land of five rivers, is of all the Indian provinces that which is best adapted for extensive irrigation from perennial canals...... The unfailing supplies of its snow fed rivers, and the even surface of its arid plains, have rendered it possible to construct, at a comparatively small cost, the vast network of canals by which the greater part of the province is now protected from the worst effects of drought....”
─ (Report of the Indian Irrigation Commission 1901-1903, part II)
Variable geography of Punjab shaped the intensity and impact of canal colonization
North and central Punjab had a milieu of montane and sub-montane areas which enjoyed adequate and unfailing rainfall accompanied by natural hill torrents. This obviated the need for any large scale canal irrigation.
South and South-West Punjab had the lowest rainfall and the largest proportion of uncultivated land.
South-western parts of Punjab:
- were more intensely penetrated by the canal infrastructure under British rule
- majority of extensions post-independence were also carried out in this region
- contained plentiful possibilities for agricultural and social engineering
Indian Irrigation Commission (1903) divides Punjab into three geographical tracts:
Tract A ─ Secure - comprised of montane and sub-montane districts lying inthe North, North-Western and North-Eastern Punjab that had abundant andconsistent rainfall thus obviating any need for any major artificial irrigation worksto provide protection against drought.
Tract B ─ Rainless - comprised of districts in the West and South-WestPunjab where cultivation was almost impossible without irrigation since normalrainfall was extremely deficient.
Tract C ─ Insecure - comprised of districts lying in the North, North-Eastand Eastern Punjab which could very well be cultivated without recourse toartificial irrigation other than wells etc.
The three tracts of Punjab
The three tracts of British Punjab
TRACT A – SECURE TRACT B –RAINLESS TRACT C - INSECURE
Districts Districts Districts
1. Hazara 1. Muzzafargarh 1. Gujranwala
2. Kohat 2. Dera Ismail Khan 2. Gurdaspur
3. Hoshiarpur 3. Multan 3. Amritsar
5. Kangra 5. Dera Ghazi Khan 5. Ludhiana
6. Bannu 6. Shahpur 6. Lahore
7. Sialkot 7. Jhang 7. Firozpur
8. Rawalpindi 8. Lyallpur (Faisalabad)* 8. Delhi
9. Shimla 9. Mianwali* 9. Karnal
10. Attock (Half)* 10. Gujarat
11. Amballa
12. Gurgaon
13. Jhelum
14. Rohtak
15. Hissar
16. Attock (Half)*
*Post 1947 districts.
Rainfall and artificial modes of irrigation
The total average rainfall varies, as a general rule inversely with the distance with the Himalayas. Along the foot of the hills there is a zone of the country where it amounts to over 30 inches per annum and is fairly certain, so that a large area of crops can be grown every year with the help of local rainfall alone. Further out the average rainfall is between 30 and 20 inches, and becomes more uncertain, so that while it is still possible in good years to grow a large area of rain crops, they are more insecure and in years of drought cannot be sown or fail largely. Still more to the south west comes a zone where average rainfall is between 20
and 10 inches and exceedingly variable so that the rain crops are very precarious...........
The importance of artificial irrigation varies inversely with the amount and certainty of the
local rainfall.....Further to the south-west, the rainfall decreases in amount and becomes more uncertain, wells and canals become more and more important, until the south-west of the Punjab, no attempt is made to grow a crop unless it is irrigated by a well or canal, or sown on land moistened by river-floods.
─ (J. Wilson, C.S.I., Settlement Commissioner, Punjab, 1901)
Primacy of rainfall
“The annual rainfall rapidly decreases as the distance from the Himalayas to the south-west
increases, and soon a zone is reached below which cultivation by means of the local rainfall only becomes precarious. Accordingly cultivation was then, in part of the Province, confined almost entirely to the valleys of the rivers, where it could be carried on by means of the river-floods, of these small inundation canals, or of wells. ............
My recommendations therefore are that the Punjab rivers should be carried as far to the east and south as possible; that where rainfall is good or the underground water level sufficiently near the surface to make irrigation from wells practicable, canal water in the winter season should gradually be refused; that every possible encouragement should be give to the sinking of wells, and more particularly.......... we should gradually take into our canals more and more of the flood waters of the rivers and spread them far over the country.”
(J. Wilson, Settlement Commissioner, Punjab, 22nd October 1901)
Role of soil suitability?
The Census Report of 1921 in its section on area, population and density played down any role of soil suitability or fertility in dictating the location of canal colonies to be built.
“Cultivation in the Punjab is affected more by rainfall and irrigation than by difference in the soil...” (Census of India, 1921. Volume XV. Punjab and Delhi, Part I, 1923)
“On what may be called the Northern Plateau, north of the Salt Range, comprising the Jhelum and Rawalpindi districts, and parts of Shahpur and Hazara, the country is so cut up by hills and ravines that it is impossible to construct large canals or to sink many wells, and although the rainfall is towards the south of the plateau, comparatively scanty and uncertain, the crops are almost entirely dependent on the local rainfall..”
─ (J. Wilson, C.S.I., Settlement Commissioner, Punjab, 1901)
Cont’d
“Portions towards the south are either not cultivated at all, or are barren and covered with jungle and sandy waters; and yet the soil is friable and has for the most part a fair admixture of loam and sand, requiring the command of water only to fit it for the highest cultivation. Scarcely a stone is to be found, and the land when turned resembles the finest garden soil. If schemes for the supply of water which are understood to be in contemplation, and partially commenced should be carried out, these parts of the Punjab may be made , in time as productive as any other...”
─ (Lieut. Colonel G. B. Tremenheere, Superintending Engineer Punjab, Note on the present state of agriculture in Punjab, dated 25th September 1852)
Main Proposition
The more distant is a Punjab’s region from the Himalayas and the more rainless it is, the more profound was the impact of canal irrigation. Canal colonization had a deeper and more enduring impact in the rainless tracts of Punjab.
Is the impact of canal colonization conditioned by rainfall patterns?
High rainfall regions => lower levels of land inequality => lower impact of canal colonization
Low rainfall regions => higher levels of land inequality => higher impact of canal colonization
Did the impact of canal colonization reinforce land inequality?
Canal colonization in Punjab converted land into a coveted economic and political asset
=> Reinforced land inequality and entrenched existing elites
Crown wasteland that was now cultivable through extensive irrigation tracts was distributed by the British to Punjab’s loyalist classes
=> upper segments of agrarian hierarchy, influential political families,
and retired military personnel.
Windfall gains for controllers of agricultural land
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Average price per acre ofcultivated land
Tracing the impact on political economy
Ali (1988) highlights the colonial motives behind canal colonies, which ultimately shaped institutions in this ‘hydraulic society’.
Land Alienation Act 1900 systematically excluded the landless and lower caste peasants from the land market.
Three key motives highlighted by Ali (1988):
- political entrenchment;
- revenue extraction and
- military recruitment.
Lavish land grants to world war veterans and retired military personnel served as an important inducement for recruitment.
=> By the early to mid-twentieth century, Punjab contained less than 10 percent of the total population of British India but contributed more than half the recruits in Indian Army.
The political economy of canal colonization - II
Imran Ali: The triad of military, civil bureaucracy and landlords ─ whose power was consolidated by canal colonization ─ held the levers of governance long after the British left.
The agrarian structure left by the British in Punjab ─ and its associated political economy ─ became a precursor to the political domination of the military and landed aristocracy.
Land continues to be unequally distributed: 2 percent of households own more than 40 percent of land, with large landowners controlling 66 percent of the agricultural land.
A deeper imprint on the rainless tract
The rainless tract became a focus of canal building activity.
Limited cultivation prior to the construction of canals
Population density was lower as a result: nearly four times lower than tract C
Canals brought windfall gains to those who owned land and those who received land grants.
With canals came landless migrants and sub-tenants
Rainfall and land inequality
Attock
Bahawalpur
Bannu
ChagaiD.G.Khan
D.I.Khan
FaisalabadGujranwala
Gujrat
Hazara
Hyderabad
Jacobabad
Jhang
Jhelum
Kalat
Karachi
Khairpur
Kohat
Lahore
Larkana
Lasbela
Loralai
Mianwali
Multan
Muzaffargarh
Nawabshah Peshawar
Quetta
Rawalpindi
Sahiwal
Sargodha
Shaikhupura
Sialkot
Sibi
Sukkur Tharparkar
Zhob
-20
24
4 5 6 7lrainfall31
lfarmer60 Fitted values
Rainfall and landlessness
Attock
Fateh Jang
Hasanabdal
Hazro
Jand
Pindigheb
BahawalnagarChishtian
Fort Abbas
Haroonabad
Minchinabad
Ahmedpur East
Bahawalpur
HasilpurKhairpur Tamewali
Yazman
BhakkarDarya KhanKallur Kot
Mankera
Chakwal
Choa Saidan Shah
Talagang
DG KhanTaunsa
Chak Jhumra Town
Faisalabad
Jaranwala Town
Sumundri Town
Tandlianwala Town
Gujranwala
Kamoke Town
Nowshera Virkan Town
Wazirabad Town
GujratKharianSara-e-Alamgir
Hafizabad
Pindi Bhattian
Ahmadpur Sial
Chinniot
Jhang
Shorkot
Dina
Jhelum
Pind Dadan KhanSohawa
Chunian
Kasur
Pattoki
Jahanian
Kabirwala
KhanewalMian Channu
Khushab
Noorpur Thal
Lahore
Choubara
Karor Lal Esan
Layyah
Dunya Pur
Kehror PaccaLodhran
Malakwal
Mandi Bahauddin
Phalia
Essa Khel
Mianwali
Piplan
Jalalpur Pirwala Town
Multan
Shujabad Town
Ali pur
Jatoi
Kot Addu
Muzaffargarh
Nankana Sahib
Sangla HillShah Kot
NarowalDepalpur
OkaraRenala KhurdArifwala
Pakpattan
Khanpur
Liaqatpur
RY Khan
Sadiqabad
Jampur
Rajanpur
Rojhan
Gujjar Khan Town
Kahuta Town
Kallar Sayaddan TownKotli Sattian Town
Murree TownRawalpindiTaxila Town
ChichawatniSahiwal
Bhalwal
Kot Momin
Sahiwal2
Sargodha
Shahpur
Sillanwali
Ferozewala
Muridke
Safdarabad
Sharaqpur Sharif
SheikhupuraDaska
Pasrur
Sambrial
Sialkot
GojraKamalia
TT Singh
Burewala
Mailsi
Vehari
0
.05
.1.1
5
0 100 200 300 400avgrain
prop_muzaara Fitted values
Canal irrigated regions have a greater share of landlessness today
Narowal
Shakargarh
Sialkot
Pasrur
Gujar KhanRawalpindi
Daska
MurreeKahuta
Jhelum
Chakwal
Pind Dadan Khan
Fatehjang
Tallagang
Pindigheb
Gujrat
AttockMianwali
Bhakkar
Khushab
Leiah
Kharian
Sanghar
Isakhel
Wazirabad
Shorkot
Jampur
Gujranwala
Shahdara
Minchinabad
Rajanpur
Dipalpur
Hafizabad
Jhang
Bhalwal
Kasur
Alipur
Shahpur
Shujabad
Lahore
Phalia
D.G.Khan
Kot Adu
Khairpur
Muzaffargarh
Chiniot
Chunian
Bahawalpur
Nankana Sahib
Pakpattan
Allahabad
Bahawalnagar
Okara
Ahmadpur LammaMultanAhmadpur East
Sheikhupura
KhanpurKabirwala
Lodhran
MailsiToba Tek SinghSamundri
Rahim Yar Khan
Montgomery
Jaranwala
Lyallpur
Khanewal
Sargodha
-.1
-.05
0
.05
.1
e(
pro
p_m
uza
ara
| X
)
-.5 0 .5e( Nahri | X )
coef = .05148354, (robust) se = .01383754, t = 3.72
Land inequality and growth of literacy
Rawalpindi
JhelumSialkotGujrat
Karachi+Thatta
GujranwalaLahore AttockLyallpur
Hazara
SheikhupuraShahpur
KohatMontgomeryMianwaliMultan PeshawarJhang NawabshahHyderabad+DaduLarkana
SukkurMuzaffargarhBannu
SibiThraparkar Pishin / QuettaChahgi KalatD. I. KhanDera Ghazi Khan
Jacobabad
Loralai
Zhob
10
20
30
40
50
60
0 20 40 60Area above 150 acres, % of total area
Growth of literacy, 1931-98 Fitted values
Literacy and landlessness
Ahmadpur Sial
Ahmedpur East
Ali pur
Arifwala
Attock
Bahawalnagar
BahawalpurBhakkar
Bhalwal
Burewala
Chak Jhumra Town
Chakwal
Chichawatni
Chinniot
Chishtian
Choa Saidan Shah
ChoubaraChunian
DG Khan
Darya Khan
Daska
Depalpur
Dunya Pur
Essa Khel
Faisalabad
Fateh Jang
Ferozewala
Fort Abbas
Gojra
Gujjar Khan Town
GujranwalaGujrat
Hafizabad
Haroonabad
Hasanabdal
Hasilpur
HazroJahanian
Jalalpur Pirwala Town
Jampur
Jand
Jaranwala Town
Jatoi
Jhang
Jhelum
Kabirwala
Kahuta Town
Kallur Kot
Kamalia
Kamoke Town
Karor Lal Esan
Kasur
Kehror Pacca
Khairpur Tamewali
Khanewal
Khanpur
Kharian
Khushab
Kot AdduKot Momin
Lahore
Layyah
LiaqatpurLodhran
Mailsi
Malakwal
Mandi Bahauddin
Mankera
Mian Channu
Mianwali
Minchinabad
Multan
Muridke
Murree Town
Muzaffargarh
Nankana Sahib
Narowal
Noorpur Thal
Nowshera Virkan Town
Okara
Pakpattan
Pasrur
Pattoki
Phalia
Pind Dadan Khan
Pindi Bhattian
PindighebPiplan
RY Khan
Rajanpur
Rawalpindi
Renala Khurd
Sadiqabad
Safdarabad
SahiwalSahiwal2
Sambrial
Sangla Hill
Sara-e-Alamgir
Sargodha
Shah Kot
Shahpur
Shakargarh
Sharaqpur Sharif
Sheikhupura
Shorkot
Shujabad Town
Sialkot
Sillanwali
Sumundri TownTT Singh
Talagang
Tandlianwala Town
Taunsa
Taxila Town
Vehari
Wazirabad Town
Yazman
.2.4
.6.8
0 .05 .1 .15prop_muzaara
Literacy_Over_10 Fitted values
Greater share of uncultivated land in low rainfall regions
Ahmadpur Lamma
Ahmadpur Sharqi
Alipur
Allahabad
Attock
Bahawalnagar
Bahawalpur
Bhakkar
Bhalwal
Chakwal
Chiniot
Chunian
Daska
Dera Ghazi KhanDipalpur
Fateh-jangGujar Khan
Gujranwala
Gujrat
Hafizabad
Isa Khel
Jampur
Jaranwala
Jhang
Jhelum
Kabirwala
KahutaKasur
KhairpurKhanewalKhanpur
Kharian
Khushab
Kot Addu
Lahore
Leiah
Lodhran
Lyallpur
Mailsi
Mianwali
Minchinabad
MontgomeryMultanMuzaffargarh
Nankana Sahib
NarowalOkara
Pakpattan
Pasrur
Phalia
Pind Dadan KhanPindigheb
Rahim Yar Khan
Rajanpur
Rawalpindi
Samundri
SargodhaShahdara
Shahpur
Shakargrah
Sheikhupura
Shorkot
Shujabad
Sialkot
Tallagang
TaunsaToba Tek Singh Wazirabad
0.2
.4.6
.8
0 10 20 30 40Average rainfall in tehsil in 1923
Proportion of total area not cultivated Fitted values
Regions that were historically uncultivated contain a greater share of landless peasants today
Isa Khel
MianwaliDera Ghazi Khan
Bahawalpur
Ahmadpur Sharqi
Jampur
Shahpur
Kharian
Muzaffargarh
Allahabad
Lyallpur
Ahmadpur LammaGujrat
Samundri
Pasrur
Okara
TaunsaJaranwala
Alipur
Kasur
Phalia
Khanpur
Tallagang
Attock
Daska
Shakargrah
Sheikhupura
Minchinabad
Chunian
ChakwalShahdara
NarowalKabirwala
Rahim Yar KhanLahore
Multan
PindighebFateh-jang
Sialkot
KahutaPind Dadan Khan
Montgomery
Gujar Khan
ChiniotRawalpindiJhelum
Khanewal
Nankana Sahib
Gujranwala
Bhalwal
Khairpur
Hafizabad
Sargodha
Dipalpur
Bahawalnagar
Murree
Khushab
Toba Tek Singh
Rajanpur
Shujabad
Jhang
Pakpattan
Lodhran
Wazirabad
Mailsi
Kot Addu
Bhakkar
Shorkot
Leiah
-.1
-.05
0
.05
.1
e(
pro
p_m
uzaa
ra | X
)
-.4 -.2 0 .2 .4e( NCult | X )
coef = .13506729, (robust) se = .05326066, t = 2.54
Land continues to be an important political asset
Lahore
Rawalpindi
Sialkot
Gujrat
Narowal
Jhelum
Chakwal
Nankana Sahib
Faisalabad
Sheikhupura
Kasur
Gujranwala
Mianwali
Khushab
Toba Tek Singh
Sargodha
BahawalpurMultan
Mandi Bahauddin
Vehari
Rahimyar Khan
Pakpattan
Bahawalnagar
Sahiwal
BhakkarOkara
Muzaffargarh
Attock
JhangKhanewal
Layyah
Hafizabad
Lodhran
Dera Ghazi KhanRajanpur
0.2
.4.6
.8
.2 .4 .6 .8 1Proportion of MPAs whose profession is agriculture
Presence in at least two assemblies (% of total MPAs) Fitted values
Persistence of political elites
Key arguments
We argue:
- that the political economy of the colonized regions was shaped in significant ways by the process of canal colonization.
- by radically altering the political economy of the region, canal colonization serves as an important historical basis for regional comparisons.
- canal colonization can provide a possibly important explanation for why the development trajectory of colonized regions diverged so significantly from regions that had limited or no exposure to canal colonization.
Situating in global literature
A growing body of literature highlights the role played by geographicalconditions in shaping colonial policies, which in turn shape developmentoutcomes.
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2001) - role of local disease environment inshaping colonial strategies.
Engerman and Sokoloff (1997, 2003, 2005) - highlight the effect of factorendowments, like soil suitability, on colonial policies and subsequent paths ofeconomic development.
Colonization and development
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2001): disease and development
viewing current institutions as a function of past institutions, it highlights the role of colonialism in shaping early institutions
Colonial powers faced different geographic constraints in different parts of the world, necessitating different colonial strategies.
Settler mortality rates, determined by the local disease environment, played a decisive role
Colonizers often decided to settle in places where the disease environment was favourable. It is in these places where high quality institutions were set up.
The basic claim is that institutions really matter and geography worked almost entirely through the establishment of early institutions that tended to persist even after independence.
Endowments and inequality
Engerman and Sokoloff (1997, 2003, 2005)-
- Highlighted the importance of factor endowments (e.g., soil suitability for wheat relative to sugar) in shaping colonial policies and patterns of initial inequality—both of which have lingering effects on development
- Basic argument rests on how soil suitability shaped crop choices and the resulting colonial policy in the Americas.
-Land in Latin America was more suitable for the cultivation of sugar crops, which required large quantities of both land and labour.
- This laid the foundation of an agrarian structure that produced slave plantations and a high degree of land inequality, thus creating conditions for
extreme inequality, both economic and political.
Geography, history and development
We explore how geography, as part of initial conditions, shaped canal colonization which in turn determined the political economy of post colonial Punjab.
We seek to investigate:
a) the role of geographic factors in shaping canal colonization
b) the extent to which these geographic aspects can help explain contemporary regional differences in socio-economic performance.
c) whether geographical drivers of canal colonization set Punjab apart from other parts of British India, and indeed, regions within Punjab