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CPR Seminar Series: Trevon Logan

Virtual

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Trevon Logan (Ohio State University) will present “Competition and Discrimination in Public Accommodations: Evidence from the Green Books” as part of the CPR Seminar Series.

Abstract: This paper seeks to determine the role of market factors in the provision of non-discriminatory services before federal legislation forbade racial discrimination in public accommodations.  We present a model of firm discrimination where a fraction of White consumers has discriminatory preferences related to shopping alongside Black consumers. The model captures the equilibrium relationship between the ratio of Black to White consumers and the ratio of non-discriminatory to discriminatory firms in a local market.  A key insight of the model is that the market will not compete away discrimination when it arises on the part of consumers.  Therefore, discrimination can persist in equilibrium, in contrast to traditional models of taste-based discrimination.  We examine this hypothesis empirically using a new county-level dataset constructed from the Negro Motorist Green Books and the retail section of the Census of Business on the number of non-discriminatory and discriminatory public accommodations in the United States between 1939 to 1955.  Using plausibly exogenous variation from multiple sources, we show that changes in the racial composition of consumers led to increases in the ratio of discriminatory to non-discriminatory firms in the post-war era.  These results are robust to a host of alternative explanations.  While our results suggest that market conditions played a role in reducing segregation, our empirical estimates are small, which confirms Cook et al. (2022)’s conjecture that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a necessary step toward ending racial discrimination in public accommodations.  

For more information, please contact Alyssa Kirk.


Region

Virtual

Open to

Faculty

Students, Graduate and Professional

Organizer

MAX-Center for Policy Research

Contact

Alyssa Kirk
315.443.9929

amkirk@syr.edu

Accessibility

Contact Alyssa Kirk to request accommodations