working

POPULAR TAGS

 Outside the Beltway 

3/5 Compromise

Will Baude ponders the 1787 decision to count slaves as 3/5 of a person and wonders why they settled on that particular fraction:

All of this just points to 3/5 being the result of bargaining; quite understandable, but also a little odd. After all, the highly natural focal point when two sides of roughly equal bargaining power are fighting between whether to pick 0 or 1 is 1/2. I can think of two possible explanations: Either some delegate (perhaps from North Carolina) was simply the first to name a middle-ish fraction, and everybody else realized that if they started dickering about the proper fraction, they were still going to get nowhere, or this is some evidence that the southern states had greater bargaining power than the northern ones, and thus could extract a little concession past the seemingly “fair” compromise. Neither seems greatly likely to me, but I am otherwise stumped.

I always wondered why they didn’t call it the “60 Percent Compromise.”

While I don’t know the answer to Will’s question and am too tired and/or lazy to Google it, I’m pretty sure it wasn’t greater Southern political pull. While everyone focuses on slaves counting as 3/5 for apportionment and thus representation in the House, the same figure also applied to the head tax that was the primary source of revenue for the federal government until the passage of the dastardly 16th Amendment and the income tax.

The other thing to keep in mind here is that it’s a misnomer to say that slaves were considered “3/5 of a person.” Indeed, as Dred Scott proved, they were in fact 0/5 of a person. The 3/5 was merely an accounting gimmick.

Update: Chris Lawrence proffers the possibility that the 3/5 formula balanced the voting power of the free and slave states. Hui Lun of Begging to Differ does the math and more or less confirms this theory.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

Follow James on FriendFeed | Twitter | Digg
 
 
Related Stories:
    • None Found
 
Recent Stories:
Tags | US Politics
| Subscribe to RSS Feed | Permalink | Send TrackBack

 
Comments
 

Another thing to keep in mind: the racists were the ones who wanted to count blacks as 5/5 of a person, and the non-racists were the ones who wanted to count them as nothing.

---

Posted by Patterico | May 9, 2004 | 12:07 am | Permalink
 

RSS feed for these comments.

Comments are Closed

 
Search OTB
Lijit Logo
OTB RSS Subscribers via FeedBurner

For Advertising Info, write
otb@blogads.com

ADVERTISERS

OTB MEDIA

MANzine logo

OTB Gone Hollywood

OTB Sports

Allie is Wired

ATLANTIC COUNCIL

New Atlanticist Atlantic Council Blog



Visitors Since Feb. 4, 2003

All original content copyright 2003-2009 by OTB Media. All rights reserved.