The demand for a formal apology for the transatlantic slave trade, led by a coalition of African and Caribbean nations, has landed on the desks of Western leaders with the delicate grace of a falling safe. Caricom and the African Union are now pushing for more than words; they want a financial reckoning. But any CFO worth his salt will tell you that the past is a sunk cost. The question is whether this is a moral imperative or a fiscal liability.
Let's start with the numbers. The economic damage from slavery is incalculable, but that hasn't stopped various estimates. A 2023 report from Brattle Group, often cited by reparations advocates, suggested the UK alone could owe £18.8 trillion. That is more than the entire UK GDP for a decade. Even a fraction of that would send the bond market into a tailspin. Gilt yields would spike, and the pound would get battered. Capital flight would be inevitable as investors flee to less encumbered assets.
But this is not just about the UK. The United States, France, Portugal, and Spain are also in the crosshairs. The collective demand is for a formal apology, debt cancellation, and investment in health, education, and infrastructure. From a market perspective, this is a massive contingent liability. It’s a clause in the global social contract that investors have not priced in. If Western governments bow to this demand, expect volatility in sovereign bonds and a rethink of risk premiums.
Of course, the moral case is undeniable. The transatlantic slave trade was a crime against humanity, and its economic legacy of inequality persists. But the mechanism for redress is the problem. Government-to-government transfers are inefficient. They often end up in offshore accounts or fuel corruption. A better approach would be to tie reparations to measurable outcomes: school enrollment, child mortality, or GDP growth. That would be a pay-for-performance model, which the City could get behind.
Then there is the question of timing. With inflation still sticky and central banks wary of further stimulus, any large-scale transfer would be inflationary. The Bank of England would have to tighten monetary policy further to offset the fiscal expansion. That would hit growth and employment. It is a lose-lose for Western governments: either they pay and face inflation, or they refuse and face diplomatic isolation and trade disruptions.
What about the private sector? Some companies have already apologised for their historic ties to slavery. Lloyd’s of London and Greene King have issued statements. But that is a drop in the ocean. If the corporate sector were to be held jointly liable, the hit to shareholder value would be significant. Insurance companies and banks with roots in the colonial era would be particularly exposed. Investors should be watching for any sign that these contingent liabilities are being priced in.
To be clear, I am not arguing against acknowledging historical wrongs. But the term 'reparations' is a loaded word in financial circles. It smacks of wealth confiscation and moral hazard. What the West should offer is a combination of apology, investment, and debt relief, structured as a developmental Marshall Plan. That would be less disruptive to markets and more effective in the long run.
The bottom line is this: the demand for a formal apology is the thin end of the wedge. Whether it stops at words or escalates to trillions in transfers will determine the stability of global bond markets for years to come. As always, follow the money.