How economic exchange can favour human genetic diversity

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Abstract

By allowing individuals to use goods they do not produce, economic exchange is recognised as driving the wide diversity of economic activities seen in human societies. Since productivity also depends on innate abilities, we ask whether economic exchange could have influenced human evolution and promoted adaptive genetic diversity. We model a system where individuals produce and exchange goods under a Walrasian equilibrium, with abilities determined by an evolving quantitative genetic trait. We then analyse how exchange shapes the evolutionary pressures on this trait. Our analysis demonstrates that exchange consistently promotes negative frequency-dependent selection, which favours the maintenance of genetic diversity. Exchange also generates stable long-term adaptive polymorphism when the production of goods requires different abilities. Importantly, we establish that the mode of exchange matters: markets, where individuals can switch trading partners, promote genetic diversity under broader conditions than when exchange occurs in isolated pairs. Finally, we show that genetic diversity and economic specialisation can facilitate the emergence of the other under a wider range of conditions. Our findings suggest that economic exchanges play a crucial role in fostering biological diversity and offer insights into how a culturally determined mode of organisation may have shaped human evolution.

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