Author:
Cappelli Gabriele,Baten Joerg
Abstract
We trace the development of human capital in today's Senegal, Gambia, and Western Mali between 1770 and 1900. European trade, slavery, and early colonialism were linked to human capital formation, but this connection appears to have been heterogeneous. The contact with the Atlantic slave trade increased regional divergence, as the coast of Senegambia developed more quickly than inner areas. This pattern was affected by French early colonialism and by the reaction of different West African populations to the economic incentives provided by foreign demand for agricultural products. The peanut trade since the mid-nineteenth century further amplified regional economic inequalities.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Economics and Econometrics,History
Reference58 articles.
1. Cappelli Gabriele , and Baten Joerg . “The Evolution of Human Capital in Africa, 1730–1970: A Colonial Legacy?” CEPR Discussion Paper No. 11273, Centre for Economic Policy Research, London, 2016.
2. The biological standard of living in early nineteenth-century West Africa: new anthropometric evidence for northern Ghana and Burkina Faso1
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