Journal
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
Volume 104, Issue 3, Pages 963-990Publisher
AMER ECONOMIC ASSOC
DOI: 10.1257/aer.104.3.963
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In the American South, postbellum economic development may have been restricted in part by white landowners' access to low-wage black labor. This paper examines the impact of the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 on black out-migration and subsequent agricultural development. Flooded counties experienced an immediate and persistent out-migration of black population. Over time, landowners in flooded counties modernized agricultural production and increased its capital intensity relative to landowners in nearby similar non-flooded counties. Landowners resisted black out-migration, however, benefiting from the status quo system of labor-intensive agricultural production.
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