The Cumulative Costs of Racism and the Bill for Black Reparations

Author:

Darity William1,Mullen A. Kirsten2,Slaughter Marvin3

Affiliation:

1. William Darity Jr. is the Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy, Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.

2. A. Kirsten Mullen is a folklorist and the founder of Artefactual, an arts-consulting practice, and Carolina Circuit Writers, a literary consortium that brings expressive writers of color to the Carolinas.

3. Marvin Slaughter is the Interim Director of the African American Leadership and Policy Institute, a community-based research and advocacy organization concerned with collective uplift of Black communities.

Abstract

Two major procedures for establishing the monetary value of a plan for reparations for Black American descendants of US slavery are considered in this paper: 1) Enumeration of atrocities and assignment of a dollar value to each as a prelude to adding up the total, and 2) Identification of a summary measure that captures the dollar amount of the cumulative, intergenerational effects of anti-Black atrocities. Under the first approach, the itemization strategy, we assess wage costs to the enslaved of bondage; financial gains to the perpetrators of slavery; damages to Black victims of post-Civil War white massacres and lynchings; losses from discrimination in the provision of the home buying supports from the Federal Housing Administration and the G.I. Bill; and income penalties due to racial discrimination in employment. Under the second approach, the global indicator strategy, we calculate the present value of providing 40 acres of land to freed slaves in 1865 and the current wealth gap between Black and White Americans. We conclude that the latter standard, the racial wealth gap, provides the best gauge for the size of the bill for Black reparations.

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Economics and Econometrics

Reference85 articles.

1. Addo, Fenaba, and William Darity Jr. 2021. "Disparate Recoveries: Wealth, Race, and the Working Class

2. 173-92. Albright, Alex, Jeremy A. Cook, James J. Feigenbaum, Laura Kincaide, Jason Long, and Nathan Nunn.

3. 2021. "After the Burning: The Economic Effects of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre." NBER Working

4. Paper 28985. Alchin, Linda. 2018. "Buying Freedom from Slavery." American-Historama.org. https://www.american

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