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Arbitraging a Discriminatory Labor Market: Black Workers at the Ford Motor Company, 1918–1947

Christopher L. Foote1; Warren C. Whatley2; Gavin Wright3

1 Harvard University Press · 2 University of Michigan–Ann Arbor · 3 Stanford University

Journal of Labor Economics 2003

The 1918–47 employee records of the Ford Motor Company provide a rare opportunity to study a firm willing to hire black workers when similar firms would not. The evidence suggests that Ford did profit from discrimination elsewhere, but not by paying blacks less than whites. An apparent “wage‐equity constraint” prevailed, resulting in virtually no racial variation in wages inside Ford. An implication was that blacks quit Ford jobs less often than whites, holding working conditions constant. Arbitrage profit came from exploiting this nonwage margin, as Ford placed blacks in hot, dangerous foundry jobs where quit rates were generally high.

DOI
10.1086/374957
Volume
21 (3)
Pages
493-532
Language
en
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