Abstract
Climate change has been proven to be the ultimate cause of social crisis in pre-industrial Europe at a large scale. However, detailed analyses on climate change and macro-economic cycles in the pre-industrial era remain lacking, especially within different temporal scales. Therefore, fine-grained, paleo-climate, and economic data were employed with statistical methods to quantitatively assess the relations between climate change and agrarian economy in Europe during AD 1500 to 1800. In the study, the Butterworth filter was adopted to filter the data series into a long-term trend (low-frequency) and short-term fluctuations (high-frequency). Granger Causality Analysis was conducted to scrutinize the associations between climate change and macro-economic cycle at different frequency bands. Based on quantitative results, climate change can only show significant effects on the macro-economic cycle within the long-term. In terms of the short-term effects, society can relieve the influences from climate variations by social adaptation methods and self-adjustment mechanism. On a large spatial scale, temperature holds higher importance for the European agrarian economy than precipitation. By examining the supply-demand mechanism in the grain market, population during the study period acted as the producer in the long term, whereas as the consumer in the short term. These findings merely reflect the general interactions between climate change and macro-economic cycles at the large spatial region with a long-term study period. The findings neither illustrate individual incidents that can temporarily distort the agrarian economy nor explain some specific cases. In the study, the scale thinking in the analysis is raised as an essential methodological issue for the first time to interpret the associations between climatic impact and macro-economy in the past agrarian society within different temporal scales.
Highlights
Climate change has been proven to be the ultimate cause of social crisis in pre-industrial Europe at a large scale [1]
The study improves the understanding on climate change and social responses within different temporal scales from the perspective of agrarian economic cycle under climatic effect
This study finds that climate change is more substantial in leading the cycles of macro-economy in the long term
Summary
Climate change has been proven to be the ultimate cause of social crisis in pre-industrial Europe at a large scale [1]. Detailed analyses on climate change and macro-economy cycle in the pre-industrial epoch remain lacking, especially within different temporal scales. Agrarian economy was discussed as an important transitional mechanism linking climate change and social crisis by Zhang et al [1], certain issues pertinent to the relationships of macro-economic cycles under climate change at a large scale remain unresolved. The systemic associations between climate change and macro-economy cycle in the pre-industrial epoch have not been analyzed in detail. How precipitation affects the agrarian economy at a large scale is not discussed, in a quantitative manner
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