DialecticMaterialist said:
Its free labor; what is not financially viable here?
What I want to know it, why is it supposed to be financially unworkable to use slavery, yet using aniamls for labor is perfectly reasonable?
Let's see, will shanek argue that using oxen and horses for labor can't work becuase it costs money to maintien these animals?
How it is any different to put a human being in place of an ox when society treates those human being like animals?
Whether somethign is against the will of the individual doing the labor or not is irrelevent, be it in the case of people or other animals, in terms of economic viability.
Now though lets get into the real economics of proving WHY slavery will ALWAYS be more cost effective then wage labor.
Whenone pays wages they have to pay the worker enough for that worker to be able to provide at least food and shelter for himself, and in most cases also enough to help care for other family memebers who do not work in addition to other costs. The wage laborer has to pay for these things at market prices.
In the case of slavery the slave owner only has to provide food and shelter for the individual with no extra needs or wants being supplied and the cost of food and shelter is not paid for at market prices, the slave is typically forced to build his own shelter and provide his own food so the only cost if the labor value of the slaves time. The only other cost is for policing the salves and maintaining security.
The argument that slavery was naturally on its way out due to cost is just one o fhte more rediculous claims of free-marketers, who try to act like the "free-market" was naturally "solving the problem" (of course 100+ years too late) to show that government action to stop it was not "really needed".
Slavery was perhaps on its way out, but not due to economics, due to changing morals and views, which were expressed by the act of civil war of course.