Slavery and the Intergenerational Transmission of Human Capital

Working Paper: NBER ID: w9227

Authors: Bruce Sacerdote

Abstract: How much do sins visited upon one generation harm that generation's future sons, daughters, grandsons and granddaughters? I study this question by comparing outcomes for former slaves and their children and grandchildren to outcomes for free blacks (pre-1865), and their children and grandchildren. The outcome measures include literacy, whether a child attends school, whether a child lives in a female headed household, and two measures of adult occupation. Using a variety of different comparisons, (e.g. within versus across regions) I find that it took roughly two generations for the descendants of slaves to catch up' to the descendants of free black men and women. This finding is consistent with modern estimates and interpretations of father-son correlations in income and socioeconomic status. The data used are from the 1880 and 1920 1 percent (IPUMS) samples, a 100 percent sample of the 1880 Census and a smaller data set in which I link families in the 1920 IPUMS back to the father's family in a 100% sample of the 1880 Census. These latter data sets are derived from an electronic version of the 1880 Census recently compiled and released by the Mormon Church with assistance from the Minnesota Population Center.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: J0; N0; I2


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
descendants of former slaves (J82)socioeconomic outcomes (I24)
being born into slavery (J47)socioeconomic status of descendants (I24)
literacy rates among grandchildren of former slaves (I24)literacy rates among free blacks (I24)
conditions faced by former slaves (J47)literacy differences (I24)
children of former slaves (J82)school attendance (I21)
grandchildren of former slaves (J79)school attendance (I21)
socio-economic context (P36)intergenerational effects (D15)

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