Physics and Slavery: The Relative Cost of Calories for Slave Infants and Their Mothers,

Abstract

In Time On The Cross Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman use as the rate of slave expropriation the percent of income produced by slaves that was not spent on their maintenance. The authors measure both income and maintenance in terms of expected present value evaluated at birth. They calculate the value of maintenance costs for slaves of different ages from the cost of per capita slave maintenance by using 'Atwater's weights.' In their review of Time On The Cross, Paul David and Peter Temin criticize this approach. They argue that the figure derived for slave maintenance cost is too high, because the food costs per calorie for children were lower than for adults. They maintain that there is 'some substantial basis for thinking that calories are provided in relatively inexpensive forms during childhood. Breast-feeding is an exemplary practice in this regard.' Since the methods employed by Fogel and Engerman give more weight to children than to adults, their value for maintenance costs would be biased upward. Therefore their rate of expropriation would be too low. The example of breast-feeding is the only support that David and Temin give for their contention that the cost per calorie was less for children than for adults.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 1979
Accession Number
ADA095042

Entities

People

  • Mark Myron Hopkins
  • Nicholas Scott Cardell

Organizations

  • RAND Corporation

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Bodily Secretions
  • California
  • Corporations
  • Efficiency
  • Energy
  • Energy Transfer
  • Health
  • Law
  • Maintenance
  • Maintenance Costs
  • Nutrition
  • Physics
  • Public Health
  • Thermodynamics
  • Thinking
  • United States

Readers

  • Archaeological Resource Survey
  • Exercise and Sports Science.
  • Life Cycle Cost Analysis