Slaves and farmers who asked landowners for land to work would be the least benefit since they would get, usually, indebted to that person.
The sharecroppers are the ones who benefited the least from a sharecropper agreement.
Sharecroppers
The landowners benefited least from a sharecropping arrangement, as they often faced financial instability and reliance on the labor of sharecroppers for their income. While they initially retained ownership of the land, the sharecropping system often led to cycles of debt for both parties, limiting the landowners' ability to profit significantly. Additionally, as sharecroppers struggled to make ends meet, landowners found it challenging to maintain consistent agricultural output and profitability. Overall, the system was designed to exploit the labor of sharecroppers, leaving landowners with diminishing returns.
Minorities and women were the least benefited from the New Deal policies.
Landowners
Sharecropping benefited both the workers and the owners. Sharecropping involved tenants farming land that is owned by someone else in return for a share of the crops.
The sharecroppers are the ones who benefited the least from a sharecropper agreement.
Sharecroppers
Slaves and farmers who asked landowners for land to work would be the least benefit since they would get, usually, indebted to that person.
Slaves and farmers who asked landowners for land to work would be the least benefit since they would get, usually, indebted to that person.
Land Owners.
Land Owners.
There is no antonym for sharecropping as far as I know.
Sharecropping
the slaves
Minorities and women were the least benefited from the New Deal policies.
Landowners