Abstract

Data recently published in PNAS mapped out regional differences in the tightness of social norms across China [R. Y. J. Chua, K. G. Huang, M. Jin, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 116, 6720-6725 (2019)]. Norms were tighter in developed, urbanized areas and weaker in rural areas. We tested whether historical paddy rice farming has left a legacy on social norms in modern China. Premodern rice farming could plausibly create strong social norms because paddy rice relied on irrigation networks. Rice farmers coordinated their water use and kept track of each person's labor contributions. Rice villages also established strong norms of reciprocity to cope with labor demands that were twice as high as dryland crops like wheat. In line with this theory, China's historically rice-farming areas had tighter social norms than wheat-farming areas, even beyond differences in development and urbanization. Rice-wheat differences were just as large among people in 10 neighboring provinces (n = 3,835) along the rice-wheat border. These neighboring provinces differ sharply in rice and wheat, but little in latitude, temperature, and other potential confounding variables. Outside of China, rice farming predicted norm tightness in 32 countries around the world. Finally, people in rice-farming areas scored lower on innovative thinking, which tends to be lower in societies with tight norms. This natural test case within China might explain why East Asia-historically reliant on rice farming-has tighter social norms than the wheat-farming West.

Highlights

  • Data recently published in PNAS mapped out regional differences in the tightness of social norms across China [R

  • To measure norm tightness around China, we draw on a recent study in PNAS (2)

  • We argue that understanding the details of how people farmed rice produces more concrete reasons for how rice farming created tight norms

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Summary

Mexico Iceland

If all of China could grow rice, but only the regions that have tight norms grow rice, this would suggest that tight norms caused people to farm rice (reverse causality) To test this idea, we mapped out where it’s possible to grow rice using climate data from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Global Agro-Ecological Zones Database. Rice farming continued to predict tight norms after taking into account modern economic development, historical development, urbanization, and environmental threats (Table 2 and SI Appendix, Table S10). Rice is linked to interdependence (17), rice continued to predict norm tightness across China and around the world, even after taking into account survey measures of individualism and collectivism (SI Appendix, Table S12). Separate datasets provide converging evidence linking rice to thought style and innovation

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