Wealth Implications of Slavery and Racial Discrimination for African American Descendants of the Enslaved

Author:

Craemer Thomas1ORCID,Smith Trevor2,Harrison Brianna3,Logan Trevon4ORCID,Bellamy Wesley5,Darity William6

Affiliation:

1. University of Connecticut, Hartford, USA

2. New York University, New York City, USA

3. The University of Memphis, TN, USA

4. The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

5. Virginia State University, VA, USA

6. Duke University, Durham, NC, USA

Abstract

We compare the 2018 per capita Black–White wealth gap of about US$352,250 with portions of the estimated total cost of slavery and discrimination to African American descendants of the enslaved. For the period of slavery in the United States, we arrive at estimates of about US$12 to US$13 trillion in 2018 dollars using Darity’s land-based and Marketti’s price-based estimation methods, respectively. Estimates using Craemer’s wage-based method tend to be higher ranging from US$18.6 trillion at 3% interest to US$6.2 quadrillion at 6% interest. The value of lost freedom (LF) based on Japanese American World War II internment reparations is estimated at 3% interest to amount to US$35 trillion and at 6% to US$16 quadrillion. Further research is required to estimate the cost of lost opportunities (LC) and pain and suffering (PS). Further research is also required to estimate the costs of colonial slavery, as well as racial discrimination following the abolition of slavery in the United States to African American descendants of the enslaved. Whether the full cost of slavery and discrimination should be compensated, or only a portion, and at what interest rate remain to be determined by negotiations between the federal government and the descendant community.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Cultural Studies

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