Single events taking place at critical
junctures
may
result
in
diverging
institutional paths.
One event more than any other shaped the
medieval and early modern periods in Europe. In
the mid-fourteenth century, the Black Death
traveled along established trading routes from
the Far East to the European continent. Almost
half its population died in the plague’s
devastation.
Alongside the human devastation, the ensuing
economic fallout shaped Europe for centuries to
come.
The Black Death is therefore an example of what
is known as a critical juncture – that is, an event
capable of overturning the sociopolitical balance
of a nation, a continent or even the entire world.
Prior to the arrival of the Black Death in Europe,
the continent’s social and economic systems
were shaped by a highly extractive form of
governance and control called feudalism.
A country’s monarch owned land that he allotted
among his lords, who, in turn, were obliged to
provide military capabilities when needed. This
land was then tended to by the lord’s peasants,
who had to pay most of their harvest back to
their lord in taxes. Peasants were not permitted
to migrate without their lord’s permission. To top
it off, the lord also held judicial power over them.
However, the Black Death caused massive labor
shortages. In Western Europe, this meant that
peasants finally felt they had the capacity to
demand lower taxes and more rights.
But the same cannot be said of Eastern Europe.
There, the peasants were less well-organized.
Landowners managed to bring peasants under
the yoke by taking advantage of their lack of
organization. In contrast to their Western
European counterparts, Eastern European
institutions became increasingly extractive, as
higher and higher taxes were extracted from the
peasants.
It can therefore be said that the Black Death
formed a critical juncture. It resulted in both the
eventual dissolution of feudalism and, somewhat
more swiftly, in less extractive institutions in
Western Europe. But the opposite was true just
a little further east.
There is a name for the phenomenon by which
critical junctures lead to divergent paths. It’s
known as institutional drift. This means that
regions that are otherwise quite similar bifurcate
in different directions.
Something similar happened just a few centuries
later. This time the critical juncture was the
expansion of global trade and the colonization of
the Americas. These advents accelerated the
path of institutional drift, as not all countries in
Europe profited economically from them.
It may take centuries, but all it takes is a few
critical junctures and the resulting institutional
drift to result in huge differences between the
institutional landscapes of countries that were
once alike.
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