This paper investigates the impact of Reconstruction-era amnesty policy on the officeholding and wealth of elites in the postbellum South. Amnesty policy restricted the political and economic rights of Southern elites for nearly three years during Reconstruction. I estimate the effect of being excluded from amnesty on elites’ future wealth and officeholding using a regression discontinuity design that compares individuals just above and below a wealth threshold that determined exclusion from amnesty. Results on a sample of Reconstruction convention delegates show that exclusion from amnesty significantly decreased the likelihood of ex-post officeholding. I find no evidence that exclusion impacted later census wealth for Reconstruction delegates or a larger sample of ex-slaveholders. The results are in line with previous studies evidencing both changes to the identity of the political elite, and the continuity of economic mobility among the planter elite across the Civil War and Reconstruction.
Amnesty Policy and Elite Persistence in the Postbellum South: Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design Available to Purchase
I thank Cyrus Corman-Gill, Amita Chauhan, Desiree Moshayedi, and JaVonte Morris-Wilson for help with transcribing census data. The paper benefited from constructive comments by David Bateman and participants of the “Slavery & Its Legacies Symposium” hosted by the USC Bedrosian Center. This work was partially supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant DGE-1106400 and the National Science Foundation under Grant DMS-1638521 to the Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute. Data and code are available at https://github.com/ jvpoulos/amnesty.
Poulos J (2021), "Amnesty Policy and Elite Persistence in the Postbellum South: Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design". Journal of Historical Political Economy, Vol. 1 No. 3 pp. 353–375, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/115.00000013
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