It’s one of those ideas that sounds entirely reasonable at first pass. Slavery was a grotesque crime. No argument there. So naturally, someone should compensate someone.
Then you start asking the awkward follow-up questions and the whole thing begins to wobble.
Take Ghana. Perfectly respectable country, relatively stable, doing better than quite a few of its neighbours. Not a basket case, not a war zone, not uniquely impoverished. Yet here it is, front and centre making the case for compensation on behalf of history.
And that’s where it gets a bit slippery.
Because the history isn’t as tidy as the modern narrative would like it to be. The slave trade wasn’t a simple story of Europeans arriving, grabbing people, and sailing off. It was a system. European demand, yes, but also African intermediaries, local conflicts, capture, sale. Unpleasant all round, and not exactly a one-sided ledger.
None of that excuses the scale or brutality of what followed, but it does make the idea of a clean victim and a clean perpetrator rather harder to maintain.
Then there’s the present-day claim. The argument runs that slavery created structures that still disadvantage people today. That may well be true in some places, at some levels. But it’s rarely demonstrated with any precision. It’s more often asserted in broad strokes, as if 200 years of subsequent history politely stood still.
If you look across Africa, outcomes don’t line up neatly with exposure to the slave trade. Some of the most affected regions have muddled through reasonably well. Others with very different histories have struggled more. Governance, resources, policy, sheer luck - they all seem to matter rather a lot.
Which raises the slightly uncomfortable question. If Ghana is owed compensation, on what basis exactly? Not because it is uniquely poor. Not because it alone suffered. And not even because it was entirely a victim in the first place.
At this point you hear the line that keeps popping into my head. People who were not enslaved demanding reparations from people who never enslaved anyone. It has a certain brutal clarity to it, even if it slightly oversimplifies what is being argued.
Because the argument has quietly shifted. It is no longer about direct harm. It is about inherited advantage and inherited disadvantage, carried across generations. That is a much broader and far more slippery claim, and one that is rarely nailed down with any precision.
All perfectly reasonable in tone. Less so in detail.
Once you attach a price tag, it turns into something else. A financial claim made by a modern state, on behalf of people long dead, against other modern states whose citizens had no part in it. And with no clear way of working out who owes what to whom, or why Ghana rather than, say, somewhere poorer with a different history.
Which is why this will likely end where these things usually do. A few solemn statements, perhaps an apology or two, some polite movement on returning artefacts, and a carefully worded fund that looks suspiciously like the foreign aid we already have, just with a different label on the tin.
Justice, it turns out, is much easier to agree on in principle than it is to invoice.











