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CHAPTER 14. WAR, RECOVERY, and REGIONAL DIVERGENCE. The Economics of war. The South was unprepared for war and outmanned The South hoped the North would tire of the loss of human lives President Lincoln’s re-election sealed the South’s fate. Trade and finance policies.
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CHAPTER 14 WAR, RECOVERY, and REGIONAL DIVERGENCE
The Economics of war • The South was unprepared for war and outmanned • The South hoped the North would tire of the loss of human lives • President Lincoln’s re-election sealed the South’s fate
Trade and finance policies • Confederate government discouraged trade with England and banned sales of cotton to the North • South was unable to come up with a good way to collect taxes • Northern economy far less effected by the war
Civil war & northern industrialization • Cost of Civil War nearly twice the national income in 1860 • Cost of Civil War twice the total market value of slaves • Growth of commodity output was no higher after the war, possibly lower than before the war
Economic retardation in the south • Economic role reversal • Huge decline in Southern output • Southern manufacturing rebounded faster than Southern agriculture
Decline in the deep south • Key cotton states experienced greatest setbacks • Plantation system destroyed • Withdrawal of labor • Cotton demand slowed
Inequities of war • Rich man’s war / poor man’s fight • Prices grew faster than wages in the North • Draft could be avoided in the South if you owned enough slaves
Legacy of slavery • 13th & 14th Amendments important, but not enough • Southern incomes suffered, led to hatred of blacks and the North • Difficult to protect the rights of blacks
Legacy of slavery • Some blacks migrated to reunite families • Most stayed in the South • Sharecropping