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Two worlds apart: Determinants of height in late 18th century central Mexico
Institution:1. The Academy of Korean Studies, Republic of Korea;2. University of Oxford, United Kingdom;3. Sungkyunkwan University, Republic of Korea;1. Queen Mary University of London, School of Business and Management, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK;2. Kent Business School, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7PE, UK;3. Department of Economics, University of Thessaly, Korai 43, 38333, Volos, Greece;1. Department of Economics, Kyung Hee University, 26 Kyunghee-daero, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul 02447, South Korea;2. Department of Economics, Korea University, Seoul, South Korea;1. Université Panthéon-Assas, Paris II, CRED, Paris Center for Law & Economics, 26 rue des Fossés Saint-Jacques,75005 Paris, France;2. Université Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, Department of Economics, Building G, Office 517 C, 200 avenue de la République, 92000 Nanterre, France
Abstract:Anthropometric literature on the American territories of the Hispanic monarchy before their independence is still scarce. We attempt to expand the field with a case study that includes some important novelties.Albeit our main source, the military records of the Censo de Revillagigedo (conducted in the early 1790s), has already been used, the sample size and the geographical scope are unprecedented: 19,390 males of four ethnicities (castizos, españoles, mestizos, and mulatos) aged from 16 to 39 from 24 localities, including towns and villages scattered across central regions of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. We build a database that, complemented with information on resource endowments obtained from other sources, permits to analyze the determinants of height.Our results show the importance of spatial differences as well as the significance of ethnicity, occupation, rurality, age and resource endowments as determinants of height. Unprivileged mulatos are only 0.5 cm shorter than, assumedly privileged, españoles in the “first world” (El Bajío) and 1.3 cm taller in the “second world” (Eastern Central Highlands). In turn, living in the “first world” implies being between nearly 1.5 cm and 5 cm taller than the inhabitants of the “second world”. Our estimates of physical statures are placed within an international comparative context and offer a relatively “optimistic” picture.
Keywords:Heights  Spanish america  Late pre-independent  Biological  Living standards
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