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To: PeaRidge
Kettell makes use of estimates as well. It would have been hard not to. The census comes once every ten years, so estimates of current values are unavoidable if you want to be up to date.

Colwell made an estimate based on the available census data and with reference to state data. Even if his estimate was wrong -- off by half, if you like -- his basic point, that the states surrounding New York contributed more to its economy than the Deep South cotton states -- holds up, and you can see that in his figures.

Kettell's approach was based on the idea that you could trace all wealth back to agriculture or natural resources. He left out the value added by manufactures and services. It's not hard to see where he went wrong. Plenty of resource-rich countries have failed to develop because they failed to diversify and remained tied to a single crop or commodity.

654 posted on 12/12/2016 3:07:21 PM PST by x
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To: x
Compared to the books you recommended earlier on this thread, Colwell’s pamphlet is a comic book. Why you continue to defend this misrepresentation can only be explained by a need to avoid exposure as a polemic.
655 posted on 12/12/2016 3:58:16 PM PST by PeaRidge
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