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  6. How Economic Exchange Can Favour Human Genetic Diversity

How economic exchange can favour human genetic diversity

Cedric Perret1,2, Luis Santos Pinto1, Laurent Lehmann2

  • 1Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Vaud 1015, Switzerland.

Proceedings. Biological Sciences
|November 25, 2025

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View abstract on PubMed

Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Economic exchange drives human diversity by promoting genetic diversity through negative frequency-dependent selection. Market systems, compared to paired exchanges, enhance this effect, linking cultural organization to human evolution.

Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary biology
  • Behavioral economics
  • Human evolution

Background:

  • Economic exchange enables specialization and productivity, but its impact on human evolution and genetic diversity is not fully understood.
  • Innate abilities influence productivity, raising questions about how economic systems might have shaped adaptive genetic variation.
  • Understanding the interplay between cultural practices (economic exchange) and biological evolution is key to human origins.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether economic exchange has influenced human evolution and promoted adaptive genetic diversity.
  • To analyze how different modes of economic exchange shape evolutionary pressures on genetic traits.
  • To explore the co-evolutionary relationship between genetic diversity and economic specialization.

Main Methods:

Keywords:
adaptive dynamicseconomic exchangeevolutionary anthropologygenetic diversity

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  • Modeling a Walrasian equilibrium economic system with evolving quantitative genetic traits for abilities.
  • Analyzing evolutionary pressures on genetic traits under different exchange scenarios (markets vs. isolated pairs).
  • Investigating the conditions under which genetic diversity and economic specialization facilitate each other.

Main Results:

  • Economic exchange consistently promotes negative frequency-dependent selection, favoring genetic diversity.
  • Exchange generates stable adaptive polymorphism when diverse abilities are required for production.
  • Market systems promote genetic diversity under broader conditions than exchange in isolated pairs.
  • Genetic diversity and economic specialization can emerge and be sustained together.

Conclusions:

  • Economic exchange is a significant factor in fostering biological diversity and shaping human evolution.
  • The mode of exchange critically influences the promotion of genetic diversity, with markets being more effective.
  • Cultural organization, through economic exchange, has played a role in shaping human adaptive genetic diversity.
human evolution
specialization