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SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - The wealth gap between
White and African American families increased more than four
times between 1984-2007, and middle-income white households
now own far more wealth than high-income African Americans,
according to an analysis released on Monday by the Institute
on Assets and Social Policy at Brandeis University.
IASP, in a research brief, also reported that
many African Americans hold more debt than assets and at least
25 percent of African American families had no assets to turn
to in times of economic hardship. The fourfold increase in
the wealth gap, it said, reflects public policies, such as
tax cuts on investment income and inheritances, which benefit
the wealthiest and persistent discrimination in housing, credit
and labor markets.
“Our study shows a broken chain of achievement.
Even when African Americans do everything right — get
an education and work hard at well-paying jobs — they
cannot achieve the wealth of their white peers in the workforce,
and that translates into very different life chances,”
said Thomas Shapiro, IASP director and co-author of the research
brief.
“A U-turn is needed. Public policies
have and continue to play a major role in creating and sustaining
the racial wealth gap, and they must play a role in closing
it,” said Shapiro, author of "The Hidden Cost of
Being African American: How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality
and the co-author of Black Wealth/White Wealth."
Wealth, what you own minus what you owe, allows
people to start a business, buy a home, send children to college
and ensure an economically secure retirement. Using economic
data from the same nationally representative set of families
from 1984 to 2007, the IASP analysis found that the real wealth
gains and losses over the time demonstrate an escalating racial
gap.
Over those 23 years, it said, the racial wealth
gap increased by $75,000 — from $20,000 to $95,000.
Financial assets, excluding home equity, among white families
grew from a median value of $22,000 to $100,000 during that
period while African Americans saw very little increase in
assets in real dollars and had a median wealth of $5,000 in
2007.
Summing up all assets and debt, one in 10 African
Americans owed at least $3,600 in 2007, nearly doubling their
debt burden in real terms since 1984, IASP said.
The growth of the racial wealth gap significantly
affects the economic future of American families, it said.
The current gap is so large that it would pay tuition at a
four-year public university for two children, purchase or
make a solid down payment on a house, or provide a nest egg
to draw upon in times of job loss or crisis.
“The gap is opportunity denied and assures
racial economic inequality for the next generation,”
said Tatjana Meschede, a co-author of the policy brief.
Notably, IASP’s analysis found that by
2007, the average middle-income white household had accumulated
$74,000 in wealth, an increase of $55,000 over the 23-year
period, while the average high-income African American family
owned $18,000, a drop of $7,000. That resulted in a wealth
gap of $56,000 for an African American family that earned
more than $50,000 in 1984 compared to a white family earning
about $30,000 that same year.
Those figures, IASP said, make it clear that
higher income alone will not lead to increased wealth, security
and economic mobility for African Americans. Consumers of
color face a gauntlet of barriers — in credit, housing
and taxes — that dramatically reduce the chances of
economic mobility, it said.
Indeed, the data indicate that the general
trend in lending, in which consumers of color pay more for
accessing credit, increases their debt and blocks opportunities
to move forward, putting them at a severe economic disadvantage.
These are concerns that must be addressed through the creation
of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, now being debated
in Congress, and other policy changes, IASP said.
“The data suggests we need renewed attention
to public policies that provide real opportunities for advancement
by reducing barriers to mobility inherent in our tax system
and increasing transparency, regulation and access in our
housing and credit markets,” said Laura Sullivan, another
co-author.
Several factors help explain why improving
targeted public policies would reduce the racial wealth gap
and lessen the increased reliance on debt. One factor is that
over the period studied there was an increasing dependence
on credit markets to make ends meet. Among those with no financial
assets, credit is often an emergency resource to help cover
a job loss or medical emergency.
A second factor is that deregulation of the
lending market brought a proliferation of high-cost credit,
including securitized subprime and predatory loans, payday
lending and check-cashing stores. Consumers of color were
targeted in this market and resorted more frequently to credit
card debt and other forms of high-cost debt in the absence
of assets or extended family resources to draw upon.
“This data makes a critical contribution
to the debate today about how to ensure greater economic security
and opportunity for all our citizens. A racial wealth gap
affects all of us because it means that a large portion of
the population cannot contribute to building the wealth and
strength of our nation, and that is a drain on us all,”
said Meizhu Lui, director of the Insight Center for Community
Economic Development’s “Closing the Racial Wealth
Gap Initiative.
This story comes special to NNPA from the
Louisiana Weekly.
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