One Kind of Freedom: Reconsidered (and Turbo Charged)

Authors: Ransom R.L.; Sutch R.

Source: Explorations in Economic History, Volume 38, Number 1, January 2001 , pp. 6-39(34)

Publisher: Academic Press

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Abstract:

Since One Kind of Freedom was published in 1977 there have been enormous advances in computer technology and statistical software, and an impressive expansion of microlevel historical data sets. In this essay we “reconsider” our earlier findings on the consequences of emancipation in terms of what might be accomplished using the new technology, methods, and data. We employ the entire sample of 11,202 farms collected for the Southern Economic History Project, not the subsample used to prepare One Kind of Freedom. We revisit the question of declining production of foodstuffs, examining the data this time on a farm-by-farm basis. We conclude that 30% of farms in the cotton regions were “locked-in” to cotton production and another 16% were producing too much food in an effort to avoid the trap of debt peonage. Using probit methods to control for the effects of age, farm size, literacy, family workers, and willingness to assume risk, we find that race accounts for two-thirds of the gap between black and white ownership of farms. Comparing sharecropping and renting, we find that race was much less of a factor in tenure choice. We note that these efforts only scratch the surface of what remains to be done. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.

Language: English

Document Type: Research article

Affiliations: University of California, Riverside

Publication date: 2001-01-01

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