Sharecropping was very popular after the end of slavery in the US. It enabled very poor farmers of any color to earn a living from land owned by someone else. Debt peonage kept workers poor by forcing them to purchase goods from company run stores. This occurred both in the coal mines and in sharecropping.
Sharecropping developed after the slavery system had been abolished. In exchange for labor, the worker received a portion of the crop to sell and use as he wished. In reality, it was another form of slavery. The landlord deducted the rent from the portion of the crop due to the laborer, which very often left the worker with a bare subsistence living.
Debt Peonage was practiced in Peru from the 16th century until 1950. This was the practice wherein workers has to meet a required working time in a week and that they are not allowed to go beyond the land assigned to them.
Debt peonage (wage slavery) is when an employer compels a worker to pay off a debt with work.
Debt peonage existed in various regions around the world, but it was particularly prominent in the Americas, including the southern United States, Mexico, and parts of South America. This system exploited laborers by trapping them in a cycle of debt, often preventing them from being able to escape or improve their circumstances.
The peonage system is a system of involuntary servitude used to pay off debt to creditors. The peonage system affected Latin America by encouraging slavery in Latin American countries.
Debt peonage
After being freed, many former slaves chose to stay on the plantations where they had been enslaved due to lack of resources and opportunities elsewhere. Some stayed voluntarily to work for wages. Others were forced to stay due to sharecropping agreements or debt peonage.
Convict leasing involved renting out prisoners to private companies for labor, often under harsh conditions. Peonage was a system where individuals were forced to work to pay off debt, often in exploitative circumstances. Both practices were forms of coerced labor that disproportionately affected minorities in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Type your answer here... Indentured servitude
peonage
Having to stay at one job just to pay what you owe
Peonage in Latin America was a system of debt bondage where laborers worked to pay off debts owed to landowners or employers. It created a cycle of poverty and exploitation, trapping workers in a form of modern servitude. Despite being outlawed in many countries, remnants of peonage still persist in some rural areas.