What modern economics can tell us about ancient Rome
The quality of life for ordinary Roman citizens at the height of the
Roman Empire probably was better than that of any other large group of
people living before the Industrial Revolution. The Roman Market
Economy uses the tools of modern economics to show how trade, markets,
and the Pax Romana were critical to ancient Rome's prosperity.
Peter Temin, one of the world's foremost economic historians, argues
that markets dominated the Roman economy. He traces how the Pax Romana
encouraged trade around the Mediterranean, and how Roman law promoted
commerce and banking. Temin shows that a reasonably vibrant market for
wheat extended throughout the empire, and suggests that the Antonine
Plague may have been responsible for turning the stable prices of the
early empire into the persistent inflation of the late. He vividly
describes how various markets operated in Roman times, from commodities
and slaves to the buying and selling of land. Applying modern methods
for evaluating economic growth to data culled from historical sources,
Temin argues that Roman Italy in the second century was as prosperous as
the Dutch Republic in its golden age of the seventeenth century.
The Roman Market Economy reveals how economics can help us understand
how the Roman Empire could have ruled seventy million people and endured
for centuries.