The Boll Weevil’s Impact on Racial Income Gaps in the Early Twentieth Century

K. Clay, Ethan Schmick, Werner Troesken
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of a large negative agricultural shock, the boll weevil, on black-white inequality in the first half of the twentieth century. To do this we use complete count census data to generate a linked sample of fathers and their sons. We find that the boll weevil induced enormous labor market and social disruption as more than half of black and white fathers moved to other counties following the arrival of the weevil. The shock impacted black and white sons differently. We compare sons whose fathers initially resided in the same county and find that white sons born after the boll weevil had similar wages and schooling outcomes to white sons born prior to its arrival. In contrast, black sons born after the boll weevil had significantly higher wages and years of schooling, narrowing the black-white wage and schooling gaps. This decrease appears to have been driven by relative improvements in early life conditions and access to schooling both for sons of black fathers that migrated out of the South and sons of black fathers that stayed in the South.
20世纪初棉铃象鼻虫对种族收入差距的影响
本文研究了20世纪上半叶一个巨大的负面农业冲击——棉铃象鼻虫对黑人和白人不平等的影响。为了做到这一点,我们使用完整的人口普查数据来生成父亲和他们儿子的关联样本。我们发现,棉铃象鼻虫引起了巨大的劳动力市场和社会混乱,因为超过一半的黑人和白人父亲在象鼻虫到来后搬到了其他县。这种冲击对黑人和白人儿子的影响不同。我们比较了父亲最初居住在同一县的儿子,发现在棉铃象鼻虫到来之后出生的白人儿子与在棉铃象鼻虫到来之前出生的白人儿子的工资和学业成绩相似。相比之下,在棉铃象鼻虫之后出生的黑人儿子的工资和受教育年限明显更高,缩小了黑人和白人的工资和受教育年限差距。这种下降似乎是由早期生活条件和受教育机会的相对改善所驱动的,无论是黑人父亲迁出南方的儿子,还是黑人父亲留在南方的儿子。
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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