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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Johannes Renger —<br />

utensils made from metal could be obtained from outside by those who could afford<br />

them, although it is by no means clear to what extent metal tools were actually used<br />

in individual rural households. <strong>The</strong> great institutional households, however, relied on<br />

production of pottery, utensils and tools within their own workshops (Steinkeller 1996).<br />

<strong>The</strong> general principle of the institutional economy of the fourth and third millennia<br />

BC was self-sufficiency. Only very few products had to be obtained from outside<br />

Mesopotamia through long-distance trade organized by the institutional households<br />

and operated by mercantile agents (entrepreneurs) who were dependent members of<br />

these households. Goods and objects available within Mesopotamia, such as plough<br />

animals, donkeys, sheep and goats, and also cereals, which were not available or in<br />

short supply in a particular institutional household, were acquired through institutional<br />

exchange between these households. Some of the equivalent for the goods received<br />

was given in silver.<br />

Economic growth<br />

<strong>The</strong> important question of economic growth in ancient Mesopotamian economy has,<br />

so far, not been the subject of much discussion. Several factors were decisive in letting<br />

economic growth remain at, or near, a level of zero per cent. Once basic technological<br />

breakthroughs in metallurgy, pottery and textile production, as well as in building<br />

and agricultural techniques and the organization of labour, had been achieved (fifth–<br />

fourth millennia BC), no further substantial developments that could have generated<br />

a significant quantitative productive output can be observed for the following periods<br />

of Mesopotamian history.<br />

<strong>The</strong> agricultural area was limited because the water supply for irrigation from the<br />

Euphrates was limited. This resulted in limited population growth which, in turn,<br />

had repercussions for the amount of manpower available for production. A further<br />

delimiting factor was the competition for the use of land between animal husbandry<br />

and cereal production. Natural disasters and man-made factors, such as warfare and<br />

intruding nomads, limited growth in the short term, while salinization of the arable<br />

land caused by irrigation and a climatic change around 1200 BC affected long-term<br />

development.<br />

Economic growth also depends on available sources of energy and of material<br />

resources. For Mesopotamia, they were only sufficient to support the economic status<br />

quo, but not enough to sustain a measurable growth. <strong>The</strong> main sources of energy for<br />

agricultural work were human labour and animal power. For transportation purposes<br />

three sources of energy existed: man power (carriers, gangs for towing boats); animal<br />

power (plough-oxen, donkeys for overland trade); water(ways) as a means to move<br />

boats with bulky goods and the open sea by ships taking advantage of wind.<br />

Of fundamental importance for sustaining an economy, besides a sufficient energy<br />

input and demographic factors, is the availability of natural resources. Foremost for<br />

an agrarian economy, they are cultivable soil, water (either rain or irrigation water),<br />

and a suitable climate, supplemented by additional nutritional natural resources (fish,<br />

fowl, game and anything not produced as agricultural crops). One of the basic natural<br />

resources in ancient Mesopotamia was clay. It was used as the main building material<br />

and for the production and the manufacture of ceramics and utensils (e.g. clay sickles<br />

for use in harvesting).<br />

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