Even more dramatically, it looks like Haiti’s GDP per capita is still lower today than what it was during the time of slavery in the 1770s. This of course doesn’t mean that the Haitians were better off back then than they are now (Haitian slavery was famously brutal, I think significantly worse even than US slavery). Still, it’s an interesting data point for how efficient slavery-based cash crop production was in some places.
(My main source is this paper on Haitian economic history, plus looking at historical franc to usd conversion rates and inflation calculators.)
Even more dramatically, it looks like Haiti’s GDP per capita is still lower today than what it was during the time of slavery in the 1770s. This of course doesn’t mean that the Haitians were better off back then than they are now (Haitian slavery was famously brutal, I think significantly worse even than US slavery). Still, it’s an interesting data point for how efficient slavery-based cash crop production was in some places.
(My main source is this paper on Haitian economic history, plus looking at historical franc to usd conversion rates and inflation calculators.)