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The Poverty of Slavery: How Unfree Labor Pollutes the Economy 1st ed. 2017 Edición, Edición Kindle
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Historians, economists, policymakers, and anti-slavery activists need no longer apologize for opposing the dubious benefits of unfree labor. Wright provides a valuable resource for exposing the hidden price tag of slaving to help them pitch antislavery policies as matters of both human rights and economic well-being.
- ISBN-13978-3319489674
- Edición1st ed. 2017
- EditorialPalgrave Macmillan
- Fecha de publicación20 Febrero 2017
- IdiomaInglés
- Tamaño del archivo1654 KB
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Opiniones editoriales
Review
This well-researched work analyzing the impact of slavery on a nation's economy presents the negative side of the debate. ... Wright presents documentation of "negative externalities" (costs) that slavery places on the economy. -- Choice
Wright's greatest service ... is to simplify a complex body of ideas into a simple sentence: slavery is pollution. Wright's book ought to be considered as the synthesis of an underappreciated analytical tradition regarding the broader economic consequences of slavery. -- EH.NET
In his deeply researched and comparatively framed The Poverty of Slavery, Robert E. Wright, a political economist and antislavery activist, draws ... upon ... numerous classical economic thinkers to underscore slavery's pernicious effect on economies over time and place. ... relentlessly argued. -- North Carolina Historical Review --Este texto se refiere a la edición paperback.
Review
From the Back Cover
Historians, economists, policymakers, and anti-slavery activists need no longer apologize for opposing the dubious benefits of unfree labor. Wright provides a valuable resource for exposing the hidden price tag of slaving to help them pitch antislavery policies as matters of both human rights and economic well-being. --Este texto se refiere a la edición paperback.
About the Author
Detalles del producto
- ASIN : B06WD7XWKH
- Editorial : Palgrave Macmillan; 1st ed. 2017 edición (20 Febrero 2017)
- Fecha de publicación : 20 Febrero 2017
- Idioma : Inglés
- Tamaño del archivo : 1654 KB
- Texto a voz : Activado
- Lector de pantalla: : Respaldados
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- Notas adhesivas : En Kindle Scribe
- Número de páginas : 314 páginas
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº1,853,716 en Tienda Kindle (Ver el Top 100 en Tienda Kindle)
- nº301 en Microeconomía (Tienda Kindle)
- nº451 en Política Laboral
- nº876 en eBooks sobre Relaciones Económicas Laborales e Industriales
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Sobre el autor

Robert E. Wright is Senior Faculty Fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research.
https://www.aier.org/staffs/robert-e-wright/
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=D9Qsx6QAAAAJ
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3792-3506
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The autor read a lot that was said and researched about slavery along the ages, providing the reader with dozens of references to read and research if necessary.
The author presents interesting information about ancient and modern forms of slavery, the only way to make it better is to expand the section or write a new book on the forms of modern slavery, like the slave childs in Haiti and others.
What I did not like, not much actually, 5 stars
Yet, my initial reservations were wrong on both counts: the topic is not obsolete—quite the opposite in fact—and its economic effects are relevant to the task of eliminating slavery wherever it can be found. As the book clearly demonstrates, while slavery is obviously no longer as pervasive in human society as it had been in the past (with the exception of a few areas on the globe where it is still prominent) slavery is indeed a contemporary issue, and it continues to exist throughout the world today to a substantial (even though lesser) degree, as the book explains in detail. Unfortunately, as the book also discusses, slavery is allowed to exist in society, in many forms, regardless of the formal laws that have been written against it. In this sense, the book fits squarely within the context of a modern form of abolitionism.
In addition, the book presents a strong argument for our recognizing the relevance of slavery’s negative economic consequences, regardless of the universal agreement among nearly all nations that slavery is deplorable and must be eliminated. In particular, the author writes (pp. 233-34):
“[W]e must stop using moral indignation as the basis for public policy because it is just not enough ... To get the resources they need, modern abolitionists must make clear that slavery is both immoral and economically costly. Today, the moral case against slavery is ... essentially irrefutable, so neo-abolitionists should always preface their remarks by reminding people that slavery is, was, and shall forever be an abomination. Unfortunately, however, slavery’s moral bankruptcy is insufficient to stop enslavers from plying their dastardly craft, and also does not induce governments, or most of their citizens, to fight (i.e., expend resources) to eradicate them. Such folks need to be reminded that slavery is immoral but also told that the peculiar institution impoverishes everyone, including themselves. ... The notion that enslaving human beings could help the overall economy, as opposed to the much narrower claim that slavery merely pads the bank balances of enslavers, is pernicious because it appears to align the interests of enslavers with those of non-slaves. More importantly, the notion of slave-driven economic growth is simply empirically wrong. This is not to denigrate the arduous labor performed by slaves throughout history but rather to recognize that slavery, qua slavery, creates significant negative externalities (pollution), the costs of which are borne by the entire society/economy. Those costs vary over time and lace but exists wherever coercion exists and in direct proportion to the degree that workers are unfree.”
As an aside, the above passage serves as a good illustration of how well the book is written for a lay audience.
The book contains eight chapters. The first, entitled “Yet Another Half Untold,” provides a good introduction to the book and explains one of its main objective, which is to put to rest any false claims that slavery could be economically beneficial to a nation. The second chapter on “Various Degrees of Liberty” is fundamental in recognizing that slavery is not a simple yes-or-no condition, but that there is a continuum of degrees of slavery, or essentially a score that could be applied to how unfree an individual is. The scoring mechanism offered by the book is quite logical and applicable, involving factors associated with “direct methods of control” (e.g., whether there are physical restraints on the slave), “working conditions” (e.g., whether the slave is driven to work at a pace that impairs their physical well-being), and “personal life” (e.g., whether the slave may keep and control their own children, or even be allowed to have children). Chapters 3, entitled, “A Not So Peculiar Institution,” covers the history of slavery “from prehistoric times until the great emancipations of the nineteenth century” (p. 13), while the fourth chapter entitled “Slavery Resilient” covers the history of slavery thereafter, up until the present day. The fifth chapter, “That Which Is Seen: Enslavers’ Profits,” explains how slavery has been profitable for those who are enslavers, of course. The sixth and seventh chapters, “That Which Is Unseen: Slavery’s Pollution,” and “That Which Is Unseen: Slavery’s Hidden Costs,” covers the myriad of ways in which slavery has been economically detrimental to society overall, from the commodity of slaves substituting for other goods and services that people to desire, to the rebellions and wars that have resulted from slavery throughout human history. Finally, the eighth chapter on “Real Abolition” discusses modern efforts now underway to eliminate slavery on the planet, and what all individuals can, and should, do to promote the effort.
The economics in the book, which involves topics such as the markets for slaves, the productivity of slave labor, and especially the negative externalities of slavery (as just discussed) do not require a background in economics. Nevertheless, what is impressive for the economists (like myself) reading the book, is the incredible degree of thoroughness and thoughtfulness the author displays for covering every conceivable economic aspect of slavery. Such coverage varies from the economic decision by slave owners to kill their slaves (in societies where murdering slaves carries no effective penalties) whenever it is economically convenient for them to do so, to the disincentive of slave owners and their offspring to develop productive skills of their own, to the costs to the state for enforcing slavery at the bequest of, and for the protection of, slave owners, along with many other economic issues.
The existence of slavery today, in a variety of forms, is covered quite well in the book, providing information that economists certainly should know more about, as it has everything to do in economics at many levels, though the topic is rarely if ever mentioned in any economics courses. The book should therefore be on the reading list for all college courses on economic history, whether it be the economic history of a particular nation, or world economic history.
As an “economics book” the The Poverty of Slavery is a fantastic read and reference for economists and economics students. Having said this, I believe the book’s greatest contribution is its “reality check on humanity”—a feature of the book that would make it valuable to any reader, regardless of their interest in the field of economics. What I mean by this is that it conveys a truth about human history, and about humanity itself, that I suspect most people today (outside of history circles) do not fully recognize or appreciate. I found the book incredibly interesting in its description of the pervasiveness of slavery throughout human history, and how, until only relatively recently in human history, has slavery been shunned by most societies. This is, indeed, a book that will plant important seeds in the brain of anyone who ever taken an interest in subjects like human rights and social justice. It is an incredibly inspiring, and at the same time, sobering book, making us realize how far we have gone as human beings, and, more importantly, how far we still need to go, before we can dare to look upon our species with pride.
Dr. Steven Payson (economist and writer of economics books)
