News Release

Research shows that income inequalities within the Aztec Empire eased the way of the conquistadores

Guido Alfani, Bocconi University, Milan, and Alfonso Carballo reconstruct economic relationships in pre-Columbian Mexico, showing that Aztec rulers were ruthless exploiters

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Bocconi University

Did Income Inequalities Doom the Aztec Empire?

video: Spanish Conquerors did not themselves bring #inequality to the Aztec lands they invaded: they exploited the extractive institutional framework that was already in existence, adapting it to suit their plans and adding further layers of inequality, explains Guido Alfani (Bocconi Department of Social and Political Sciences). In an article he wrote together with Alfonso Carballo of NEOMA Business School in France he assessed what kind of disparities there were in the so-called #AztecEmpire before the Conquest. #aztecs The Empire originated from an alliance of three city-states which over time came to rule over a range of provinces which were required to pay tributes, including in blood. Its agriculture was fairly advanced in terms of yield per unit of surface, but extremely labor-intensive as the wheel was unknown and no beasts of burden were employed. “We roughly estimated per capita #income in the Aztec Empire by exploiting the variation in population density using archaeological data. According to our calculations, per capita income at the eve of the Spanish conquest was on average approximately US$690, which was significantly lower than in 16th century Spain. But this average conceals important differences between provinces,” he says. Inequality in average income levels between the provinces was a major source of inequality and was exacerbated by the uneven treatment that they received within the Empire. The taxes that each province had to pay were variable, depending on how the province had become part of the Aztec Empire. Those provinces that had militarily resisted the Aztecs were subjected to higher imperial tax rates once conquered. Another major source of inequality was the social structure. The main social distinction was between the nobility, the commoners and the slaves. The nobility dominated the commoners by holding exclusive control over productive resources. Overall, before the conquest, the richest 1% earned 41.8% of the total income; this figure grows to 50.8% if the richest 5% is considered. As the income share of the poorest 50% was just 23.3%, this makes for a very skewed income distribution, much worse than in today’s Mexico. High inequality helps explain how a little Spanish army of just a few hundred men could quickly overrun the Aztec Empire. The highly centralized and unequal tax collection was so resented by vast regions of the Empire that their populations rebelled and took arms on the Spaniards’ side. However, their hopes of a better life were dashed as Spanish colonization further exacerbated the highly extractive conditions that had come into being before the conquest and ensured their continuation for centuries thereafter. view more 

Credit: Bocconi University

Spanish conquerors did not themselves bring inequality to the Aztec lands they invaded, they merely built on the socio-economic structure that was already in place, adapting it as it suited their plans. This is the subject of an article by Guido Alfani of Bocconi University, Milan, and Alfonso Carballo of NEOMA Business School in France. Their “Income and inequality in the Aztec Empire on the eve of the Spanish conquest”, has just been published on Nature Human Behaviour.

Income distribution in present-day Mexico is, as in other Latin American countries, rather unequal. Alfani and Carballo started out from this well-known fact and began to investigate whether the situation was any different before Spanish rule replaced the so-called Aztec Empire. This polity originated from an alliance of three city-states which over time came to rule over a range of provinces which were required to pay tributes, including in blood. Its agriculture was fairly advanced in terms of yield , but extremely labor-intensive as the wheel was unknown and no animals were employed.
 
The primary social distinctions in the Aztec Empire were between the nobility, the commoners and the slaves. The elite dominated the commoners by holding exclusive control over resources. The taxes established for each province were variable, depending on how the province had become part of the Aztec Empire. Those provinces that had militarily resisted the Aztec Empire were subjected to higher imperial tax rates once conquered.
 
The main hurdle in assessing income levels for pre-Hispanic Mexico lies of course in the scarcity of relevant data: Aztec archives were extensively destroyed by Spanish troops and little usable information survives. The authors therefore estimated per capita income in the Aztec Empire by exploiting the variation in population density using archaeological data. They estimate that average per capita income on the eve of Spanish conquest was approximately US$690, which is significantly lower than contemporary Spain. This average conceals important differences between the cities and the rural areas.
 
Alfani and Carballo estimated that before the conquest the richest 1% earned 41.8% of the total income; this figure grows to 50.8% if the richest 5% is considered. As the income share of the poorest 50% was just 23.3%, this makes for a very skewed income distribution, actually even worse than today. The imperial ruling class, the provincial ruling class and the non-ruling nobles amounted to less than 2% of the total population but concentrated 46.6% of the total income.

This is extremely important because it helps explain how a little Spanish army of just a few hundred men could quickly overrun the Aztec Empire. The highly centralized tax collection was so resented by vast regions of the Empire that their populations, whose living standards were only slightly above subsistence, actually took arms on the Spaniards’ side.
 
“The rapacious institutions characterizing the Aztec Empire paved the ground for subsequent colonial exploitation,” says Guido Alfani. “As we argue, the relatively high levels of income inequality that came to characterize Latin America could not be considered to have been the sole consequence of the initial conditions imposed by the Spaniards. Nor could they simply come from the predatory attitudes and institutions of the colonial elite. Instead, colonization further exacerbated the highly extractive conditions that had come into being before the conquest and ensured their continuation for centuries thereafter.”
 
Guido Alfani, Alfonso Carballo, “Income and inequality in the Aztec Empire on the eve of the Spanish conquest”, Nature Human Behaviour, published 26 June 2023, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-023-01636-3
 


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