Duke prof proposes $12 trillion in reparations....$800k per eligible Black household

A Duke professor is proposing up to $12 trillion in slavery reparations.

The professor told Campus Reform this can be done without raising taxes.

The proposal amounts to about $800,000 per eligible Black household.

Duke University public policy professor William Darity co-authored a report calling for $12 trillion in slavery reparations, amounting to $800,000 for each eligible Black household.

The Roosevelt Institute, a “think tank and campus network that works to move the country toward a new economy and democracy by the people, for the people,” sponsored the report, titled “Resurrecting the Promise of 40 Acres: The Imperative of Reparations for Black Americans.”

In the report, Darity and co-author Kirsten Mullen pointed to the U.S. government’s failure to deliver on a promise to give 40 acres to every former slave. The two said that this failure is the cause of the current wealth gap between Black and White households. If this policy had been enacted after the Civil War, the authors “speculate that there would be no need to consider the case for black reparations today.”

[RELATED: Should Democrat Party pay slavery reparations? Young people think so]

As the “culpable” party, the report said that the federal government “must pay the debt” of $10 to $12 trillion dollars in 2016 dollars. The couple arrives at this figure by calculating that a payment of $800,000 to each Black household would close the current wealth gap.

Furthermore, the authors stated that incremental reparations programs will not adequately resolve the problem of systemic racism.

“Though piecemeal initiatives are admirable in their acknowledgment of the existence of a debt, these incremental efforts will not fundamentally change the conditions of structural, racial economic inequality,” Darity and Mullen said. “Our nation must be held accountable, and the federal government must meet the debt.”

[RELATED: Prof says ‘Reparations is the only answer’ to ‘embedded racism’]

To support their proposal, the authors pointed to the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund and federal money that flowed into Newtown, Connecticut, following the Sandy Hook massacre.

“Ultimately, respect for black Americans as people and as citizens — and acknowledgment, redress, and closure for the history and financial hardship they have endured — requires monetary compensation,” concludes the report. “Moreover, an emphatic message that ‘the murderers cannot inherit’ will be delivered.”

Campus Reform asked Darity how the government would be able to pay for the reparations without raising taxes on those who have never owned slaves. He said that there is “nowhere” in the report where raising taxes is considered an option.

“Nowhere [in the report] do we say the reparations plan must be financed by raising anyone’s taxes,” Darity said.

[RELATED: Mass. student group demands reparations, segregated housing, and even more money]

When Campus Reform asked for clarification on how the government would pay reparations without raising taxes, Darity pointed to the government’s response to coronavirus.

“In the same way that the federal government just spent somewhere between $2 to 4 trillion without raising taxes in response to the coronavirus crisis,” Darity said.

He pointed Campus Reform to The Deficit Myth by Stony Brook University Professor Stephanie Kelton, a former Bernie Sanders economic policy advisor.

A review of The Deficit Myth by John Cochrane of the Wall Street Journal stated that the book advocates freely printing money to “finance a massive spending agenda, with no concern about debt and deficits.” In the book, Kelton acknowledged that printing trillions of dollars could also lead to crushing inflation, according to Cochrane.

Darity also said that he identifies the U.S. government as responsible for more than slavery. 

”100 years of legal segregation and waves of white terror campaigns, and ongoing atrocities including mass incarceration, police executions of unarmed blacks, sustained discrimination in credit, employment, and housing markets, and, most significant from an economic standpoint, the staggering racial wealth gap,” he told Campus Reform

Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @BenZeisloft