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7 comments

[–] [Deleted] 0 points (+0|-0)

Snippet:

This notion that slavery somehow benefited the entire economy is a surprisingly common one and I want to briefly refute it. This is related to the ridiculously bad academic study (discussed here) that slave-harvested cotton accounted for nearly half of the US's economic activity, when in fact the number was well under 10%. I assume that activists in support of reparations are using this argument to make the case that all Americans, not just slaveholders, benefited from slavery. But this simply is not the case.

At the end of the day, economies grow and become wealthier as labor and capital are employed more productively. Slavery does exactly the opposite.

Slaves are far less productive that free laborers. They have no incentive to do any more work than the absolute minimum to avoid punishment, and have zero incentive (and a number of disincentives) to use their brain to perform tasks more intelligently. So every slave is a potentially productive worker converted into an unproductive one. Thus, every dollar of capital invested in a slave was a dollar invested in reducing worker productivity.

[–] [Deleted] 0 points (+0|-0)

Do you have any evidence to support this?

[–] [Deleted] 0 points (+0|-0)

Other than the academic study quoted in the linked article, no.

[–] [Deleted] 0 points (+0|-0)

There is no study, academic or otherwise, quoted in the article. It simply refers to another article on the blog that mentions a book that the blog author doesn't agree with.