A blueprint for reparations in the US William Sandy Darity

I’d like to begin with a personal story

my grandmother was the daughter of a

woman who was the child of persons who

were enslaved on Rose Hill plantation in

North Carolina and as a consequence my

sister and I are the fourth generation

removed from slavery my grandmother also

lived in a town in North Carolina called

Wilson which was a tobacco stapling

Center and she lived in a town that was

characterized by the classic pattern

that that’s featured in many many

southern towns in the United States

there was a railroad track that ran

between the black side of town and the

white side of town as an act of

separation that was emblematic of the

Jim Crow period in the United States

there was a point at which I wanted to

go and see a movie happen to be a Disney

movie after all an old Disney movie

called Darby O’Gill and the little

people but it was being shown at the

white theatre in Wilson North Carolina

and my parents refused to let me go

because they said we would be compelled

to sit in the balcony and they viewed

this as an indignity that they were not

going to stomach

and so I wasn’t able to go I was very

hurt because I really wanted to see this

movie but I also came to realize as I

grew a bit older that this was an

indignity that was relatively minor in a

social context in which lynchings and

white massacres had become quite routine

so I would like to emphasize that when

we think about the case for reparations

we are thinking about a case that is not

exclusively centered on the harms and in

justices and atrocities associated with

slavery itself but we have to view

slavery as a crucible that created a

subsequent or

Raye of atrocities that are associated

with white supremacy in the united

states and those atrocities include

those that were the product of slavery

itself but also of nearly 100 years of

legal segregation in the United States

accompanied by white mob violence and

frequent frequent intervals and and so

we usually refer to that as the Jim Crow

period and I want to emphasize when

people say there no living victims of

slavery there certainly are a number of

us who are living victims of the Jim

Crow period of course if the nation

waits long enough to engage in an act of

redemption and compensation we won’t be

alive any longer but a national act of

procrastination is not a justification

for avoiding paying the debt and then of

course in the aftermath of the period of

legal segregation the post-civil rights

act error we have a set of circumstances

in which there were ongoing atrocities

inclusive of mass incarceration police

executions of unarmed blacks the

persistence of discrimination and

employment housing and credit markets as

well as something that I’m going to

emphasize and the remainder of my

comments the immense racial wealth gap

in the United States now in our book

from here to equality which is authored

with Kirsten Mullen who happens to be my

spouse in our book we define reparations

as a program of acknowledgement redress

and closure for a grievous injustice

acknowledgement constitutes a

circumstance in which the culpable party

acknowledges or recognizes that it has

committed a vicious harm and it also

acknowledges or recognizes that it has

benefited from the execution of this

vicious harm redress is the act of

restitution on the part of the culpable

party and here we’re going to talk in a

moment

about about the role of the wealth

differential in the United States

between blacks and whites as a critical

component of of a redress process for

black American descendants of us slavery

the final component is closure which is

a point at which the culpable party in

the victimized community come to an

agreement that the debt has been paid

and no further claim will be made unless

there’s a renewal of the atrocities that

have taken place in the past or a new

array of atrocities is forthcoming so I

want to focus next on the wealth

differential and the wealth differential

is best captured by the magnitude of

these types of differences in black and

white wealth black Americans constitute

approximately 13% of the nation’s

population but only possess about 2.6

percent of the nation’s wealth

collectively across the globe there’s

approximately 300 trillion dollars in

wealth a hundred trillion dollars or

about a third of that is in the

possession of American citizens and

ninety percent of that is in the

possession of white Americans so we have

a situation in which black Americans

constitute a much much higher percentage

of the u.s. population than they do in

terms of their share in in the nation’s

wealth this translates into a

circumstance in which the average black

household has approximately eight

hundred thousand dollars less in net

worth than the average white household

another way to think about this is as

the fact that there are three white

billionaires Jeff Bezos

Bill Gates and Warren Buffett who were

worth more than the collective 80

percent of black Americans who are at

the lower end of the wealth distribution

but it’s not just a matter of the

billionaires wealth that explains this

gaping differential for example white

Americans 25%

white Americans have a net worth in

excess of 1 million dollars but it’s

only 4% of black Americans and wealth is

important in terms of being

distinguished from income wealth is a

stock concept it’s the difference

between the value of what we own and

what we owe the net property of our

value excuse me the net value of our

property income in contrast is is a flow

concept that’s most closely associated

with our earnings and wealth is more

significant than income in terms of

providing us with Economic Security and

opportunities to fully participate in

the society wealthier households have

the capacity to survive income losses

that might be associated with

unemployment or medical emergencies

wealthier families can provide their

children with high quality education and

debt free education wealthier families

can have access to high amenity

neighborhoods they can also purchase

legal counsel valuable legal counsel

when confronted with the criminal

justice system wealthier families can

leave the quest to subsequent

generations to ensure their economic

security and well-being so wealth is

extremely significant and the

differentials that exist between blacks

and whites are connected to sharp

differences in Economic Opportunity and

well-being indeed it’s very important to

note that the major factor that does

that dictates what an individual or a

family’s level of wealth is is the

transfer of resources across generations

which means in turn that wealth captures

the cumulative intergenerational effects

of white supremacy in the United States

when we think about the black/white

differentials and so in from here to

equality we argue that the goal of a

reparations program a goal that is

associated with the redress component of

reparations is to eliminate the racial

wealth gap and this would be done

primarily through direct

to eligible recipients black American

descendants of us slavery in the book we

identify two standards for eligibility

the first criteria is what we refer to

as a lineage criteria an eligible

individual would have to demonstrate

that they have at least one ancestor who

was enslaved in the United States and

the second criterion is what we refer to

as an identity criterion and this is a

criterion that says that an individual

would have to show that for at least 12

years before the onset of a reparations

program the enactment of a reparations

program or the enactment of a study

commissioned for a reparations program

whichever comes first for at least 12

years before that an individual would

have to have shown that they

self-identified as black Negro or

African American the culpable party for

making the payment is the United States

government the magnitude of the payment

must be sufficient to eliminate racial

wealth differentials within the course

of a decade like to add finally that the

corona virus epidemic only further

dramatizes the case for reparations

we’ve observed excess mortality on the

part of black Americans we’ve observed a

collapse in black businesses in black

employment opportunities and we’ve

observed a high degree of crisis in

terms of opportunities for education as

our instructional environment has

shifted from the classroom into the home

via the internet so as a consequence we

argue that it’s important to continue to

commit to the case for reparations in

the midst of the pandemic it’s always an

urgent time to adopt reparations it has

been an urgent time for a hundred two

fifty five years since the end of

American slavery where no restitution

has been

provided it’s time for the nation to pay

the debt it’s time for racial justice

and borrowing from Chloe of all dari I’d

like to say that we collectively must

become enchanted with the goal of racial

equality thank you so much sandy for for

all of that and for explaining your book

a little bit and also talking to this

moment and I think in thinking about

this moment you know obviously the

subject of reparations is not a new one

it’s something that we have been having

conversations about for a very long time

and you know I think that when you think

about what we’re experiencing right now

both related to the pandemic and

violence against the black community the

conversation often does sort of look at

reparations as a way forward and I’d

love to hear you to sort of explain why

you feel this moment might be different

from others in making progress towards

towards this I think that there has been

a shift in the terrain that became

evident in 2019 even prior to the corona

virus pandemic and prior to the

widespread recognition of the phenomenon

of anti black police violence which the

black community has been well aware of

for for a long long time even prior to

that I think in 2019 there was a signal

shift in the in in the environment with

respect to attention that’s being given

to reparations I’m not sure how to

explain why that was the case but for

the first time in my lifetime we had

serious and credible political figures

who were contesting for the presidency

of the United States actually uttering

the term reparations and potentially

talking about whether or not there would

be the grounds for introducing some sort

of study commission for reparations

through congressional legislation that

had never happened before in my lifetime

and it seemed to me in 29

that the nation was having the most

animated conversation about reparations

at on the political stage that had ever

taken place since the Reconstruction era

in the United States so I think that the

more recent chain of events has produced

greater momentum for serious

consideration of this idea I think

people are no longer dismissing it out

of hand I think they’re trying to think

about what the consequences would be for

our nation of adopting a reparations

program for black American descendants

of slavery in terms of our moral future

as well as our social future

collectively and so the the idea of

reparations of course stems from this

this concept of forty eight percent of

you will write that during that the

abolition of slavery after the abolition

of slavery rather freed slaves would

receive forty acres and a mule promised

that the government of course never made

good on and so I let’s look into some of

the details of the plan that you put

forward in terms of thinking first about

what the value really is of that forty

acres in a mule today so in other terms

you know how do you quantify the full

debt that you believe is owed to

descendents of American slaves in 2020

so the the moment of the failure to

provide the forty acres is really is

really a critical epoch in American

history you know I think it shapes the

the basis for the immense racial wealth

gap that we observed today so if we

start with the moment and the immediate

aftermath of the civil war where the

formerly enslaved were promised forty

acre land allotments the minimum

estimate of what that that amount of

land should have constituted would have

been about forty million acres what

happened initially was about four forty

thousand of the formerly enslaved

individuals were settled on four hundred

thousand acres out of the allotment the

General Sherman had had specified in

special orders number fifteen which came

closer to five point three million acres

stretching from South Carolina

to northern Florida but only only

400,000 acres were actually ever settled

and toward the end of 1865 Andrew

Johnson Lincoln’s successor after

Lincoln was murdered Andrew Johnson

reverses the policy of settlement of the

formerly enslaved altogether and

restores the land to the former slave

holders now at the same time the

homestead acts were being activated in

the United States providing large tracts

of land to white settlers in the western

part of the United States on tracts of

land that had been appropriated and

seized from the Native American

population in fact those allotments were

a hundred sixty acre allotments and we

estimate today that anywhere from forty

five million to ninety million Americans

are beneficiaries of those allocations

because of the intergenerational effects

of wealth transfers so so this is the

starting point we could use the present

value of the forty million acres as an

estimate as a lower bound estimate of

what the magnitude of a reparations bill

should be and in the work that we’ve

done this comes to approximately four to

six trillion dollars depending upon

which interest rate you use to compound

to the present but in the work that we

do we also argue that what’s really

critical is to address the gaping racial

wealth gap of black white wealth

differential and to do that it would

require somewhere in the vicinity of ten

to twelve trillion dollars at the low

end estimate of what would be required

for for erasure of that of that

differential well and then from that ten

trillion dollars we’re talking about

individual payments or payments are the

two individuals this is not about money

being funneled into two programs but

actual checks that individual

descendants of American slaves would

receive is that right yes so the idea

here is that if you’re going to

the racial wealth differential you have

to do it by by taking the precise step

of providing direct payments to the

individuals who are eligible if you go

the indirect route you will have a

dilution of the delivery of the

resources to the individuals who deserve

them or merit them so for example if you

pursued some sort of neighborhood based

or community based operation in a world

in which gentrification is running

rampant it would be very difficult to

ensure that the resources would go to

the folks who are supposed to receive

them so so yes one of the central

objectives of a reparations program is

to provide direct payments to the

eligible recipients I’m certainly

open-minded about the prospect of having

other kinds of programmatic initiatives

that could be that could be pursued for

example providing resources and funds to

historically black colleges and

universities might be a potential option

of what could be done with the

reparations fund but for substantive and

symbolic reasons the preponderant use of

the funds must be direct payments to

eligible recipients and let me add when

when I talk about payments I don’t

necessarily mean cash payments per se

the objective is to eliminate the racial

wealth gap so what you really want to do

is to build assets for black Americans

and those assets could be could be built

in the form of trust accounts or

endowments not necessarily in the form

of outright cash payments so so there

they’re a number of options in the way

in which you could provide individual

eligible recipients with the resources

from a reparations project and I mean I

think one of the big questions for a lot

of people is sort of where where do we

see find this money are you do you

anticipate that it’s on the weight of

tax dollars is this something that is

you know rerouted from other programs

where do we get the money so I think

that I start with a rejection of the

scarcity principle

that underlines the view that you have

to take money from pot a to produce

money for pot B I think that our most

recent experience with the overnight

provision of approximately two and a

half trillion dollars to try to cope in

some way with the coronavirus crisis

indicates that the federal government is

not constrained by tax payments to

proceed with making new expenditures so

so from my perspective the government

can simply set up a program of

reparations payments and create the

resources or create the funds that would

that would address the needed amounts

you could do it over a period of years

to make the annual Vig not quite as high

you could do it over the course of a

decade for example but there’s there’s

no there’s no tax based constraint or

revenue based constraint on the capacity

of the federal government to make

additional expenditures the only

substantive constraint is the potential

for producing high rates of inflation

and so you would necessarily have to

design a reparations project or any new

expenditure program in such a way that

you mitigated the inflation risk but

that’s the only barrier and so I don’t

see us having to cut off cut off other

programs or avoid other kinds of

valuable initiatives for the purposes of

financing a reparations project now I

want to get into some of the the

criticisms of not just your plan but

reparations in general but first let’s

some a second question from audience so

Paul Rucker asks full reparations work

if the current system stay in place

seems like payment for reparations up

payment of reparations excuse me would

quickly go back to the white community

so there was a sketch on Dave Chapelle

show when it was still on the air

and which reparations were given to

black Americans and all the money flowed

back to white American corporations

because of their there was no

infrastructure of black businesses that

folks could actually purchase on

purchase products from so so one

response to this question is the money

wouldn’t quickly go back to the white

community if a an important aspect of a

reparations project was the development

of of black businesses or black

enterprises so that’s one one answer the

second answer is associated with the

point that I made a moment ago that

there are multiple ways in which the

payments could be made and if the

payments are made in the form of an

endowment or a trust or or what we call

in more technical language and economics

less liquid assets it’s kind of a clumsy

term but that’s that’s what we say if

the if the payments are made in that

form you wouldn’t have the money flowing

out to any one in in in an instantaneous

fashion people would have would have to

make more discrete decisions about how

to use the funds and when to use the

funds and so you potentially could have

resources being devoted by individual

black Americans to infrastructure

development within the black community

where there would be an opportunity to

actually purchase purchase goods and

services from from other members of the

black community so so I think you know

it’s it’s a question of whether or not

you have a black business infrastructure

and it’s a question of whether or not

the payments are made in such a way that

they’re not outright cash payments that

flow immediately out of people’s hands

you know one of the things that’s really

compelling for me in talking with you is

that I know that you were at one point

not supportive of the idea of

reparations and so I’m curious to hear

what sort of made you skeptical and what

changed your feelings so around 1989

an economist named Richard America

approached me about writing the

introduction to a volume that he had

assembled where he had requested a group

of economists to construct estimates of

the magnitude of a reparations program

and at the time I told Richard well you

know I think reparations is something

that’s ethically ethically sound but I

don’t think it’s ever gonna happen that

this is something that’s really in the

vein of speculative fiction and it’s

just not going to occur so why are we

going to invest time and trying to

trying to work on a reparations project

or collect essays about how much it

would actually cost and Richard said to

me and with with great wisdom I didn’t

realize the depth of the wisdom at that

time but he said read the essays and

write whatever you choose to write but I

want you specifically to write the

introduction so I proceeded to read the

essays and the more that I read the more

that I became convinced that not only

was a reparations project for black

American descendants of US slavery

something that was vital to do from a

moral standpoint but it was vital to do

from a practical standpoint and that

even if the odds were extremely long of

actually having a reparations program

come into realization that it was

something that I was obligated to pursue

and so it was in the process of working

on Richards book which was later called

the wealth of races that I came to the

point where I began to say that I had to

do research and I have to do advocacy

work in favor of reparations climbing

land let’s talk a little bit of I think

about some of the criticisms that people

do have of reparations you know I think

first one of the big ones you hear is if

if this is a way to

close the wealth gap you know is it

really fair that you know descendants of

slaves who have earned themselves into

the 1% would also be eligible to receive

these checks and how do you respond to

to those who say that could you clarify

Whitney what you mean by 1% I’m not sure

that I understand yeah I mean so

basically just if you’re thinking about

the Oprah Winfrey’s of the world the you

know descendants of slaves who are you

know millionaires and billionaires and

you know how can you justify payments

for those so a reparations project is

not an anti-poverty program it’s an act

of justice restitution that has never

been paid before and so there is no

criteria associated with the conditions

of living eligible recipients that

should block them from access now if

individuals like and Oprah Winfrey said

I’m so wealthy this this payment really

is not of importance to me I’d rather it

go to somebody else

that’s their discretion but they

certainly are eligible to receive it

when reparations payments were made to

victims of the Holocaust by the German

German government there was no inquiry

about the economic status of the

eligible recipients when reparations

payments were made to japanese-americans

in the United States to compensate to

some to some degree for their unjust

incarceration during World War two no

one asks how much is that particular

individual earning or how much are they

worth before they were we’re given their

$20,000 payments so so I think the same

is true here this is not a matter of how

well individual black people are doing

today this is a matter of the collective

difference in black wealth and white

wealth and that’s what has to be spanned

and any black American who is a

descendant of persons who was

we’re enslaved in the United States is

eligible to receive it it should be a

matter of their discretion as to whether

or not they take it and then for those

who also think you know this money maybe

we’ll be better served if it were funded

into social service service programs you

know if you’re thinking about money that

might support failing education systems

or think about money that might support

police perform in other ways that sort

of prevent black Americans from

attaining and maintaining wealth what

are your feelings about that so none of

those approaches that I’ve seen

particularly kind of social programs and

some grandsons Universal programs of

redistribution none of the ones that

I’ve ever seen would meet the task of

eliminating the black/white wealth

differential in the United States none

of them have the capacity or the

wherewithal to erase the black/white

differential and wealth and so there’s

there simply not sufficient they’re not

enough and and I’m particularly taken by

the emphasis a lot of people want a

place on providing resources for

education and as as a university

professor of course I’m fairly

passionate about educational attainment

I’d be a hypocrite if I wasn’t but but

in terms of thinking about the racial

wealth gap educational attainment

doesn’t hold much promise at all and see

here’s a notorious statistic that I

think is very telling on this score

black heads of households with a college

degree have 2/3 of the net worth of

white heads of households who never

finished high school so you’re not going

to eliminate the racial wealth gap

simply by giving black people more and

better education because you’re not

going to interrupt the intergenerational

transmission effects that are associated

with moving resources from one generator

to the next if you continue to have a

community that doesn’t have any

resources to transfer to subsequent

generations and let’s take another

question from the audience so amma asks

i’m concerned about proving eligibility

not because of the challenges of being

able to track down genealogy records but

also because of the exclusion of members

of the African Diaspora who have lived

live in the United States can you speak

more on this issue yes so first of all

there’s no question that the types of

criteria that I’ve talked about for

eligibility will give genealogist a huge

amount of business but one thing that

we’ve proposed in the final chapter of

from here to equality which is the

chapter where we detail a program of

reparations is that the federal

government in the process of

establishing the reparations project

could provide resources to individuals

who are trying to establish their their

legitimate claims for reparations

resources for the genealogical research

there could be an agency that could be

established that would do the

genealogical research on behalf of of

individual claimants and so I don’t

think that that’s an impossibility the

other issue that’s raised by in the

question here is the is are the contours

of who would be included and who is

excluded from this particular type of

reparations project and yes the

individuals who are more recent black

immigrants to the United States

particularly after the 1960’s which is

the the vast majority of recent black

immigrants to the United States they

would not be eligible for this program

and they would not be eligible because

the anchor for this program is the

failure to provide the formerly enslaved

with the 40 acres that they merited

at the end of the period of enslavement

and this failure is what has had long

repercussions for living black American

descendants of us slavery individuals

who are more recent immigrants from

other African countries don’t share that

particular historical historical affect

or historical moment and I think that

that’s what defines the unique position

of this particular claim if folks

believe that more recent black

immigrants do have some form of

reparations claim then I encourage them

to try to develop it but it’s not the

same one that’s based upon the

cumulative effects of slavery Jim Crow

and ongoing white atrocities in the

United States and you know you so you’ve

been doing this work for a long time and

I think as we’re running out of time

here I’m just curious about your

sentiments about how you you feel in

terms of the progress that has been made

towards this and how how far away or

closer you feel we are to seeing a plan

like yours realized or any sort of

restitution realized for descendants of

American slaves so like most economists

I’m horrendous at forecasting and so I’m

not entirely sure you know what what’s

going to evolve I will say this the

momentum that exists in the present

moment is promising and I would say that

you know in in the year 2000 when

Michael Dawson and Ravana pop off did a

major survey they found that only 4% of

white Americans were in favor of

reparations for black Americans that

figure is closer to about 20% now and

and almost half of all Millennials are

in favor of reparations so so the

direction seems to be going in in the

proper way and I think that there is a

significant amount of support at minimum

for the creation of a common

to study reparations the prelude to the

japanese-american reparations was a

commission called the Commission on

wartime relocation and internment of

civilians and there should be a parallel

Commission as a prelude to Black

American reparations and the possibility

of doing that is embodied in a piece of

legislation called House Resolution 40 I

will say that there are some serious

limitations and weaknesses in the

existing legislation as currently

constructed and I think that before we

go forward with passage of that

legislation which seems to be quite

possible we need to actually revise its

content but apart from that I think that

that would be a key step in moving in

the direction of a comprehensive

reparations program for black American

descendants of US slavery

我想从一个个人故事开始,

我的祖母是一个女人的女儿,

她是

在北卡罗来纳州玫瑰山种植园被奴役的人的孩子

,因此

我和姐姐是摆脱奴隶制的第四代人

祖母还

住在北卡罗来纳州的一个叫威尔逊的小镇,

那里是一个烟草装订

中心,她住在一个以美国许多南部城镇

的经典图案

为特征的

小镇,

有一条铁路

在 城镇的黑边和城镇的

白边作为美国吉姆克劳

时期象征的分离行为

有一段时间我

想去看一部

电影,毕竟这是一部迪斯尼电影 一部

名为 Darby O’Gill 和小人物的迪斯尼老电影,

但它正在

北卡罗来纳州威尔逊的白色剧院放映

,我的父母拒绝让我走,

因为他们说我们会

被迫坐在阳台上,他们认为

这是一种侮辱,他们

无法忍受

,所以我不能去。我很

受伤,因为我真的很想看这部

电影,但随着我的成长,我也开始意识到

稍早一点,在私刑和白人大屠杀已经司空见惯的社会背景下,这是一种

相对较小的侮辱,

所以我想强调的是,当

我们考虑赔偿案件时,

我们正在考虑的案件不是

完全集中在与奴隶制本身相关的危害以及

正义和暴行上,

但我们必须将

奴隶制视为一个坩埚,它创造了

与美国白人至上相关的后续或雷伊暴行

,这些暴行包括

那些作为产物的暴行 奴隶制

本身,还有美国近 100

年的合法种族隔离,

伴随着白人暴民的暴力和

频繁的间隔,所以

我们经常使用 盟友将其称为吉姆克劳

时期,我想强调的是,当

人们说没有

奴隶制的

活着的受害者时

,当然,如果国家

等待足够长的时间来参与,我们中肯定有很多人是吉姆克劳时期的受害者

赎回和补偿的行为我们将

不再活着,但国家的

拖延行为并不是

避免偿还债务的理由,

当然,在

法律隔离时期之后,民权

法案后的错误我们 在一系列

情况下,暴行持续不断,

包括大规模监禁、警察

处决手无寸铁的黑人

、歧视和就业的持续存在、

住房和信贷市场,

以及我要

强调的事情和我的其余

评论,巨大的种族歧视

美国的贫富差距现在在我们的书中

从这里到平等,这是

由克尔斯滕·马伦(Kirsten Mullen)撰写的,他恰好是

我们书中的我的配偶 我们将赔偿定义

为对严重不公正

行为的承认补救和

结案计划 损害

赔偿是有罪的

一方的赔偿行为,在这里,我们稍后将讨论

美国黑人和白人之间的财富差异

作为赔偿过程的关键组成部分的作用 对于

我们奴隶制的美国黑人后裔来说

,最后一个组成部分是结束,

在这一点上,

受害社区中的罪魁祸首

达成协议,债务已经偿还

,除非重新发生暴行,否则不会提出进一步的索赔

过去发生过或即将发生一系列新

的暴行,所以我

想接下来关注我们

黑人和白人财富的这些类型差异的大小最好地反映了所有差异和财富差异

美国黑人

约占全国人口的 13%,

但仅占

全国财富的 2.6%,

全球共有

约 300 万亿

一百万亿美元或

大约三分之一的

财富由美国公民拥有,其中

90% 由

美国白人拥有,因此我们

的情况是,美国黑人

占美国的比例要高得多

就他们在国家财富中的份额而言,他们的人口数量比他们在国家财富中所占的份额要高,

这意味着

黑人家庭的平均

资产比白人家庭的平均净资产少大约 80 万美元

另一种思考方式

是事实 有三位白人

亿万富翁杰夫·贝佐斯

·比尔·盖茨和沃伦·巴菲特,他们的

身价超过了处于财富分配低端的 80

% 的美国黑人,

解释这种巨大差异的不仅仅是亿万富翁的财富问题

例如

美国白人 25% 的

美国白人拥有

超过 100 万美元的净资产,但

只有 4% 的美国黑人和财富

区别于收入方面很重要 财富是一个

股票概念 它

是什么价值之间的差异 我们拥有和

欠什么 我们价值的净资产 请

原谅我们

相反的财产收入的净值 这是一个

与我们的收入和财富最密切相关的流动概念,

为我们提供经济保障和

充分

参与社会的机会而言,财富比收入更重要 较富裕的家庭

有能力承受

可能与失业有关的收入损失

或医疗紧急情况

较富裕的家庭可以为他们的

孩子提供高质量的教育和

无债务教育 较富裕的家庭

可以使用便利的

社区 他们还可以购买

法律顾问

面对刑事

司法系统时有价值的法律顾问 较富裕的家庭可以

将任务留给后续

几代人来确保他们的经济

安全和福祉,因此财富

极为重要,

黑人和白人之间存在的

差异与经济机会和福祉的巨大差异有关,

确实非常重要的是要

注意,造成这种情况的主要

因素 说明个人或

家庭的财富水平是

几代人之间的资源转移,

这意味着当我们考虑黑人/白人差异时,财富

反映了美国白人至上的代际累积效应

,因此从这里开始 对于

平等,我们认为

赔偿计划的目标

与赔偿的补救部分相关的目标

是消除种族

贫富差距,这将

主要通过直接

向符合条件的受助人提供美国黑人

后裔在我们的书中奴隶制来实现

确定两个资格标准

第一个标准是我们

所说的血统标准,合格的

个人必须

证明他们至少有一个

在美国被奴役的祖先

,第二个标准是我们所说

的身份 标准,这是一个

标准,表明个人

至少必须证明这一点 t

赔偿计划开始前 12 年 赔偿

计划的制定或受

委托进行赔偿计划的研究(

以先到者为准) 至少 12

年之后,个人

必须证明他们

自我认定为 黑人或

非裔美国人

付款

的罪魁祸首是美国政府 付款的数额

必须足以在十年内消除种族

财富差异

就像最后补充说,

冠状病毒的流行只会

使案件更加戏剧化 对于赔偿,

我们观察到美国黑人死亡率过高,

我们观察到

黑人企业在黑人

就业机会方面的崩溃,我们

观察到

教育机会方面的高度危机,因为

我们的教学环境已经

从 通过互联网将教室带到家中

,因此我们

认为它是进口的 蚂蚁在大流行中继续

致力于赔偿案件 采取赔偿

总是一个

紧迫的时刻 自美国奴隶制结束以来没有提供任何赔偿

的一百二五十五年以来一直是一个紧迫的时刻

国家

偿还债务的时候到了种族正义

和向所有达里人的克洛伊借钱的时候了我

想说,我们必须集体

为种族平等的目标着迷

稍微解释一下你的书,也谈到这

一刻,我认为在思考

这一刻时,你显然知道

赔偿的主题并不是一个新的主题,

它是我们已经

讨论了很长时间的事情

,你知道我 想想当你

想到我们现在正在经历的

与大流行病和

针对黑人社区的暴力有关的事情时,

谈话往往确实有点像

赔偿 s 作为前进的方向,我

很想听听你解释为什么

你觉得这一刻

在朝着这个方向取得进展时可能与其他时刻不同

在冠状

病毒大流行之前

以及在黑人社区长期以来一直很

清楚的反黑人警察暴力现象得到广泛认可之前,甚至在此之前

,我认为在 2019 年发生了一个信号

转变 在关注赔偿问题的环境中,

我不知道如何

解释为什么会这样,但这

是我有生以来第一次有

严肃而可信的政治

人物在竞选

联合国总统 国家实际上说出

了“赔偿”这个词,并可能

在谈论是否

有理由通过国会引入某种形式

的赔偿研究委员会

在我有生之年从未发生过的所有立法中,在

我看来,在 29

世纪,美国在政治舞台上就赔偿问题进行了自美国重建时代

以来最热烈的讨论,所以我认为

最近的一系列事件

为认真

考虑

这个想法产生

了更大的动力

奴隶制的美国黑人后裔在我们的道德未来

以及我们的社会未来

集体方面,所以

赔偿的想法当然源于

这个概念,你们中有 48% 的

人会写道,在

废除奴隶制之后废除奴隶制

奴隶制宁愿被释放的奴隶将

获得四十英亩土地和一头骡子

承诺政府当然永远不会

兑现和 所以我让我们来看看

你提出的计划的一些细节,

首先考虑

一下今天那四十

英亩的骡子的真正价值是什么,换句话说,

你知道如何量化你的全部

债务 相信这要归功于

2020 年美国奴隶的后代,

所以未能

提供 40 英亩土地的那一刻

确实是美国历史上的一个关键时期,

你知道,我认为它塑造

了我们观察到的巨大种族贫富差距的基础 今天,如果我们

从内战的那一刻和内战的直接后果开始,

前奴隶被承诺

分配 40 英亩的土地

,那么这部分

土地应该构成的最低估计应该

是大约 4000 万英亩,

最初发生的事情是 大约四十

四万以前被奴役

的人定居在谢尔曼将军指定

的分配地中的四十万英亩土地上

15 号特殊订单,

接近 5 点 300 万英亩

,从南卡罗来纳州延伸

到佛罗里达州北部,但

实际上只有 400,000 英亩土地被定居

,到 1865 年底,安德鲁·

约翰逊 林肯被谋杀后的继任者

安德鲁·约翰逊

扭转了定居政策

以前被奴役的人全部被奴役,现在

将土地归还给以前的奴隶主

,与此同时,美国的

宅基地行为正在启动,

为美国

西部的白人定居者

提供大片

土地 已经

从美洲原住民

人口中挪用和没收,事实上,这些分配地

是一百六十英亩的分配地,我们

今天估计,由于财富转移的代际影响,

四千五百万到九千万美国人

是这些分配的受益者,

所以这 是

我们可以使用的起点

4000 万英亩的现

值作为赔偿金额

的下限估计,在我们所做的工作中,

这大约为 4 到

6 万亿美元,具体取决于

您使用的利率 复合

到现在,但在我们所做的工作中,

我们还认为,真正

关键的是解决

黑人白人财富

差异造成的种族财富差距,而要做到这一点,则

需要大约 10

到 12 万亿美元

对擦除

差价井所需资金的低端估计,然后从那

十万亿美元中我们谈论

个人付款或付款是

两个人,这不是将

钱汇入两个程序,而是

实际 检查

美国奴隶的个人后代会

收到是对的,是的,所以这里的想法

是,如果你要获得不同

的种族财富 如果您走间接路线,您

必须通过采取精确步骤

向有资格

的个人提供

直接付款 例如,如果您

在中产阶级化猖獗的世界中追求某种基于社区或社区的运营,

那么很难

确保资源会流向

应该接收

它们的人,所以是的中央之一

赔偿计划的目标是

符合条件的受助人提供直接付款我当然

对可能采取

其他类型的计划举措

的前景持开放态度,

例如向

历史上的黑人学院和

大学提供资源和资金 可能是

可以用赔偿基金做些什么的一个潜在选择,

但出于实质性和

象征性的原因

资金的主要用途必须是直接支付给

符合条件的接受者,让我补充一下,

当我谈到支付时,我

不一定指现金支付

本身,目的是消除种族

贫富差距,所以你真正想做的

是 为美国黑人建立资产

,这些资产可以以

信托账户或捐赠基金的形式建立,

不一定以

直接现金支付的形式建立,

因此您可以通过多种

方式为个人提供

获得赔偿项目资源的合格受助人

,我的意思是,我

认为对

很多人来说最大的问题之一是我们在哪里可以

看到这笔钱在哪里?

你知道的东西是

从其他项目

过来的

从罐子 a

为罐子 BI 生产资金认为,我们最近

为试图以

某种方式应对冠状病毒危机而提供大约两万亿美元的隔夜资金的经验

表明,联邦政府

不受税收的限制

继续进行新的支出,

所以从我的角度来看,政府

可以简单地建立一个

赔款支付计划,并创造

资源或创造资金

来解决所需的金额,

你可以在几年

内完成 例如

,在十年的过程中,Vig 没有那么高

,但是

没有基于税收的限制或

基于收入的限制

,对联邦政府进行

额外支出的能力没有限制,唯一的

实质性限制是

生产的潜力 通货膨胀率高

,因此您必须

设计一个赔偿项目或任何新的

支出 以减轻通货膨胀风险的方式稀释计划,

但这

是唯一的障碍,所以我

认为我们现在不必切断其他

计划或避免其他类型的

有价值的举措来

资助一个赔偿项目我

谈谈对你的计划

和一般赔偿的批评,但首先让

我们从听众那里提出第二个问题,所以

如果当前的系统保持原状

似乎像

支付赔偿金一样,Paul Rucker 要求全额赔偿金工作 对不起,我会

很快回到白人社区,

所以当它还在播出时,有一个关于戴夫夏贝尔节目的草图,

并且赔偿给了

美国黑人,所有的钱都

流回了美国白人公司,

因为他们没有

黑人企业的基础设施,

人们实际上可以

从那里购买产品,所以

对这个问题的一个回答是钱

不会

如果赔偿项目的一个重要

方面是黑人企业或黑人

企业的发展,那么请回到白人社区,这是一个答案,

第二个答案与

我刚才提出的观点有关,

有多种方法 在其中

可以进行支付,如果

支付是以

捐赠基金或信托的形式,或者我们

用更技术性的语言和经济学所说的

流动性资产较少的形式,这是一个笨拙的

术语,但这就是我们所说的,

如果 如果以这种形式付款,

您将不会让资金

以瞬时方式流向任何人,

人们将不得不就

如何使用资金以及何时使用

资金等做出更离散的决定 您可能有

资源被个别

美国黑人投入到

黑人社区内的基础设施发展中,

在那里将有机会

实际购买购买商品

来自黑人社区其他成员的服务和服务,

所以我想你知道

这是一个

你是否拥有黑人商业基础设施

的问题,

也是一个支付方式是否符合

他们的问题 不是

立即从人们手中流出的直接现金支付

你知道

在与你交谈时对我来说真正令人信服的一件事

是我知道你曾一度

不支持赔偿的想法

,所以我很好奇 想听听

是什么让你怀疑,是什么

改变了你的感受,所以在 1989 年左右,

一位名叫理查德·美国的经济学家

找到我,要我为

他收集的一本书写序言

,他在其中要求

一群经济学家构建

一个规模的估计值 赔偿计划

,当时我告诉理查德,你

知道我认为赔偿在

道德上是合乎道德的,但我

认为这永远不会

发生 这确实

是投机小说的脉络,

而且不会发生,所以我们为什么

要投入时间并

尝试进行赔偿项目

或收集

有关实际成本的论文,理查德说

我和以极大的智慧,当时我并没有

意识到智慧的深度,

但他说读散文,

写你选择写的任何东西,但我

希望你专门写

引言,所以我继续阅读

散文和 我读得越多

,我就越相信,

不仅从道德的角度来看,对美国黑人后裔的赔偿项目

是至关重要的,

而且

从实际的角度来看也是至关重要的,

即使赔率

实际上有一个赔偿计划

已经很长时间了,我意识到这是

我有义务追求的东西

,所以它正在

编写理查兹的书 后来被称为

种族的财富

,我开始说我必须

做研究,我必须做

有利于赔偿攀登

土地的宣传工作让我们谈谈我认为

的一些批评 人们

确实有赔偿,你知道我认为

你听到的第一个大问题是,

如果这是

缩小贫富差距的一种方式,你

知道你知道

奴隶的后代已经赚到

了 1%,这真的公平吗? 也将有资格收到

这些支票,你如何

回应那些说你能澄清

惠特尼你的意思 1% 我

不确定我理解是的,我的意思是

基本上只是如果你正在

考虑 奥普拉·温弗瑞的世界,你

知道奴隶的后裔,你

知道百万富翁和亿万富翁,

你知道如何证明为这些人支付的费用是合理的

,所以赔偿项目

不是反贫困计划,而是

正义恢复的行为,没有

以前已经支付过,因此没有

与符合条件

的接受者的生活条件相关的标准

现在应该阻止他们访问,

如果像奥普拉·温弗瑞这样的人说

我很富有,这

对我来说真的不重要我会

而是交给其他人

,这是他们的自由裁量权

但当德国政府向大屠杀的受害者支付赔偿金时,他们当然有资格收到它。在向

德国政府支付赔偿金时,没有询问

符合条件的接受者的经济

状况

在美国的日裔美国人在

一定程度上补偿他们

在第二次世界大战期间被不公正的监禁没有

人问那个特定的

人在他们获得 20,000 美元付款之前的收入是多少或他们的价值是多少

所以所以 我认为

这里也是如此,这不是

个人黑人今天做得如何

的问题,而是合作的问题

黑人财富和白人

财富的选择性差异,这就是必须跨越的

,任何

作为

我们在美国被奴役的人的后代的美国黑人都有

资格获得它,这应该

由他们自行决定

无论他们是否接受,然后对于

那些也认为您知道这笔钱的人,

如果将其资助

到社会服务服务计划中

,我们可能会得到更好的服务 关于可能支持

警察的钱 以其他方式

阻止美国黑人

获得和维持财富 你

对此有何感受,所以

我见过的这些方法中没有一个是

特别类型的社会计划和

一些孙子 普遍的

再分配计划 没有 在

我见过的那些能够完成

消除美国黑人/白人财富

差距的任务中,

没有一个人拥有

消除黑人/白人

差异和财富的能力或资金,

所以根本不够,他们还不够

当然,我是一名大学教授,我

对教育程度充满热情,

如果我不是,我会成为一个伪君子,

但就种族贫富差距的思考而言,

教育程度

根本没有多大希望,看看

这里是一个臭名昭著的 我

认为在这个分数上非常有说服力的统计数据,

拥有大学

学历的黑人户主拥有从未读完高中的白人户主的 2/3 的净资产,

所以你不会

简单地消除种族贫富差距 给黑人更多

更好的教育,因为你

不会中断

与将资源从一个发电机

转移到下一个发电机相关的代际传递效应,如果你 您继续拥有一个

没有任何

资源可以转移给

后代的社区,让我们

从观众那里提出另一个问题,所以 amma 询问

我是否担心证明资格

不是因为

能够追踪家谱记录的挑战,而是

还因为排除了

居住在美国的非洲侨民成员,

您能否

在这个问题上多说一些是的,首先,

毫无疑问

,我所谈到的

资格标准类型将为系谱学家提供

大量的业务,但

我们在从这里到平等的最后一章中提出的一件事

我们详细介绍赔偿计划的一章,

联邦政府在建立赔偿项目的过程中

可以提供资源

试图为家谱研究确立其

对赔偿资源的合法要求的个人

可能 可以

建立一个

代表

个人索赔人进行家谱研究的机构,所以我不

认为这是不可能的

,这里的问题中提出的另一个

问题是

,谁将被包括在内 谁被

排除在这种特殊类型的

赔偿

项目之外 计划

,他们将没有资格,

因为该计划的核心是

未能为以前被奴役的人

提供他们在奴役期结束时应得的 40 英亩土地,

而这种失败

对活着的美国黑人后裔产生了长期影响

我们这些奴隶制的人

,他们是来自

其他非洲国家的新移民,并没有共同的历史

如果人们

认为最近的黑人

移民确实有某种形式的

赔偿要求,那么我鼓励他们

尝试发展它,但它不是

同一个 这是基于

奴隶制 Jim Crow

和美国持续发生的白人暴行的累积效应

,你知道你,所以你

做这项工作已经很长时间了,

我认为我们在这里的时间不多了,

我只是 好奇你

对你在

这方面取得的

进展的感受以及

你觉得我们离看到

像你这样的计划实现或为美国奴隶后裔实现任何形式的

赔偿有多远或多近的感受,

所以 像大多数经济学家一样,

我的预测很糟糕,所以我

不完全确定你知道

会发生什么我会

说现在存在的势头

是有希望的 g 我想说的是,

你知道在 2000 年,当

迈克尔道森和拉瓦纳突然进行一项

重大调查时,他们发现只有 4% 的

美国白人支持

为美国黑人提供赔偿,这个

数字现在接近 20%

几乎一半的千禧一代

支持赔偿,所以

方向似乎是

正确的,我认为至少有

大量的支持

来创建一个

共同研究赔偿的前奏

日美赔偿是一个

名为

战时搬迁和拘留

平民委员会的委员会,应该有一个平行的

委员会作为美国黑人赔偿的前奏,

而这样做的可能性体现在一项

名为众议院第 40 I 号决议的立法中

会说目前构建的现有立法存在一些严重的

局限性和弱点

,我认为在

我们通过之前 该

立法的年龄似乎很有

可能,我们需要实际修改其

内容,但除此之外,我认为

这将是朝着为美国奴隶制美国黑人后裔制定全面赔偿计划方向迈出的关键一步