The Economic History Review

The settlers’ fortunes: Comparing tax censuses in the Cape Colony and early American republic

Volume 76 Issue 2
Home > The Economic History Review > The settlers’ fortunes: Comparing tax censuses in the Cape Colony and early American republic
Pages: 525-550Authors: Johan Fourie, Frank Garmon Jr
Published online: August 13, 2022DOI: 10.1111/ehr.13190

Log in to access the full article.

Europeans at the end of the eighteenth century had settled across the globe, from North and South America to Australia to the southern tip of Africa. While theories of institutional persistence explain the ‘reversal of fortunes’ between settled and unsettled regions, few studies consider the large differences in early living standards between settler societies. This paper uses newly transcribed household-level tax censuses from the Dutch and British Cape Colony and the United States shortly after independence to show comparative levels of income and wealth over four decades both between the two regions and within them. Cape farmers were, on average, more affluent than their American counterparts. While crop output and livestock were more unequally distributed at the Cape, ownership of enslaved people in America was more unequal. There was little indication of an imminent reversal of fortunes.

SHAPE
Menu