This One is 400 Libyan Dinars, this One is 500: Insights from Cognitive Human Capital and Slave Trade

S. Asongu, Oasis Kodila‐Tedika
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Abstract

One of the most disturbing contemporary episodes in human history that has been decried globally is the recent Libyan experience of slave trade, where migrants captured end-up being sold as slaves. We contribute to the understanding of this phenomenon by investigating the role of cognitive human capital in slave trade. To this end, we use the historic intelligence and slave trade variables respectively, as the independent and outcome variables of interest. Our findings show a negative relationship between slave trade and cognitive human capital. Hence, slave trade is more apparent when cognitive human capital is low. The Ordinary Least Squares findings are robust to the control for outliers, uncertainty about the model and Tobit regressions. We substantiate why from the perspective of massive sensitisation and education, the non-contemporary relationship between cognitive ability and slave trade established in this study has contemporary practical policy relevance in efforts to stem the tide of clandestine travel to Europe through countries in which clandestine migrants are captured and sold as slaves.
这个是400利比亚第纳尔,这个是500:来自认知人力资本和奴隶贸易的见解
人类历史上最令人不安的当代事件之一是最近在利比亚发生的奴隶贸易,被抓获的移民最终被当作奴隶出售,这一事件受到了全球的谴责。我们通过研究认知人力资本在奴隶贸易中的作用,有助于理解这一现象。为此,我们分别使用历史情报和奴隶贸易变量作为感兴趣的自变量和结果变量。我们的研究结果表明奴隶贸易与认知人力资本之间存在负相关关系。因此,当认知人力资本较低时,奴隶贸易更为明显。普通最小二乘结果对于异常值、模型的不确定性和Tobit回归的控制是稳健的。我们证实了为什么从大规模的敏感化和教育的角度来看,本研究中建立的认知能力与奴隶贸易之间的非当代关系具有当代实际政策相关性,可以阻止通过秘密移民被捕获并作为奴隶出售的国家秘密前往欧洲的浪潮。
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