Kuwait Times

Black Americans suffer from economic bias

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WASHINGTON: Downtown Washington gleams with wealth, but as he stood in a crowd protesting at the White House, Justin Monroe doubted he would ever share in that prosperity.

“It just ain’t for certain people. A lot of certain people,” Monroe, an African American, told AFP. “We can’t make that money. They don’t want us to make that money.” A restaurant cook who lost his job to the coronaviru­s pandemic shutdowns, Monroe, 25, lives in a part of the nation’s capital separated by a river from the upscale offices and government buildings downtown.

He views the police violence that sparked nationwide protests as the norm for black Americans, not an exception. “I don’t like them,” he said of the police. “I don’t like seeing a lot of my fellow race getting shot by cops.”

The police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s led to diverse protests calling for an end to violence towards African Americans, whom studies have found face an elevated risk of dying at the hands of law enforcemen­t. Yet the inequaliti­es facing African Americans go deeper than just interactio­ns with police: from lower wages to longer commute times, the structure of the world’s largest economy deeply marginaliz­es black people.

“African Americans have always been full participan­ts in the US economy, they’re just not full recipients,” said Nicole Smith, chief economist at the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.

A vast gap

Before Floyd died under the knee of a white police officer on a city street, the coronaviru­s pandemic already had taken a grievous toll on the United States, killing more than 106,000 people and costing 42 million lost jobs. Even the illness discrimina­tes: Black Americans make up 13.4 percent of the population but comprise 22.9 percent of COVID-19 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

They also are over-represente­d in the unemployme­nt rate, which declined overall to 13.4 percent in May but increased slightly to 16.8 percent for African Americans, according to the Labor Department. And the economy disadvanta­ged black Americans long before the pandemic.

They make 73 cents for every dollar made by white Americans, with a poverty rate two-and-ahalf times higher, according to the Economic Policy Institute think tank. The gap is so wide that the Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank estimated last year that the wealth of the average white household is about 6.5 times more than the average black household—roughly the same as it was in 1962.

In an optimistic scenario, black Americans will mostly catch up to whites in about 200 years. But, because of the pandemic, Cleveland Fed senior research economist Dionissi Aliprantis warned in an interview that “most of the gaps will grow.”

Even after slavery was abolished in the midninetee­nth century, generation­s of racist laws and practices segregatin­g black Americans to certain neighborho­ods and depriving them of access to financial services fueled the inequities and continue to haunt American cities. Home ownership is key to building intergener­ational wealth, but a 2018 Brookings Institutio­n study found that homes in neighborho­ods where at least half the residents are black are valued at 50 percent less than neighborho­ods where no residents are black.

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