Suffrage, Schooling, and Sorting in the Post-Bellum U.S. South

S. Naidu
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引用次数: 132

Abstract

This paper estimates the political and economic effects of the 19th century disenfranchisement of black citizens in the U.S. South. Using adjacent county-pairs that straddle state boundaries, I examine the effect of voting restrictions on political competition, public goods, and factor markets. I find that poll taxes and literacy tests each lowered overall electoral turnout by 8-22% and increased the Democratic vote share in elections by 1-7%. Employing newly collected data on schooling inputs, I show that disenfranchisement reduced the teacher-child ratio in black schools by 10-23%, with no significant effects on white teacher-child ratios. I develop a model of suffrage restriction and redistribution in a 2-factor economy with migration and agricultural production to generate sufficient statistics for welfare analysis of the incidence of black disenfranchisement. Consistent with the model, disenfranchised counties experienced a 3.5% increase in farm values per acre, despite a 4% fall in the black population. The estimated factor market responses suggest that black labor bore a collective loss from disenfranchisement equivalent to at least 15% of annual income, with landowners experiencing a 12% gain.
战后美国南方的选举权、学校教育和分类
本文估计了19世纪美国南方黑人公民被剥夺公民权的政治和经济影响。我利用跨越州界的相邻县对,考察了投票限制对政治竞争、公共产品和要素市场的影响。我发现人头税和读写能力测试各降低了8-22%的总投票率,并使民主党在选举中的选票份额增加了1-7%。我利用新收集的关于学校教育投入的数据表明,剥夺公民权使黑人学校的师生比例降低了10-23%,而对白人学校的师生比例没有显著影响。我开发了一个包含移民和农业生产的双因素经济中选举权限制和再分配的模型,为黑人被剥夺公民权的发生率的福利分析提供了足够的统计数据。与模型一致的是,尽管黑人人口下降了4%,但被剥夺公民权的县每英亩的农场价值却增长了3.5%。估计的要素市场反应表明,黑人劳工因被剥夺公民权而遭受的集体损失至少相当于年收入的15%,而土地所有者则获得了12%的收益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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