American Dream fails generations of Blacks: Study
los angeles — Even the richest Black boys raised in the US earn less in adulthood than White boys from similar backgrounds, according to a wide-ranging study.
While white men who grew up wealthy tend to stay that way, Black boys raised in affluent families and neighbourhoods are more likely to become poor than to stay well-off, researchers at Stanford and Harvard universities found.
White boys fare better than Black boys who grow up side-by-side with parents on similar incomes in 99 per cent of American neighbourhoods, according to the study, which traced the lives of 20 million children.
No such income disparity exists between Black and White girls from families with comparable earnings, however, according to the research, carried out in collaboration
Black and white boys have very different outcomes even if they grow up in two-parent families with comparable incomes, education and wealth, live on the same city block, and attend the same school
Authors of study
with the US Census Bureau. “A defining feature of the ‘American Dream’ is upward income mobility: the ideal that children have a higher standard of living than their parents,” said The Equality of Opportunity Project, a joint initiative between Stanford and Harvard.
In contrast, Hispanic Americans “are moving up in the income distribution across generations,” and Asian immigrants have levels of upward mobility greater than all other groups, said Raj Chetty and Nathaniel Hendren, who wrote the study, “Race and Economic Opportunity in the United States.”
Black boys who move early to districts with lower poverty, less racism have lower levels of incarceration and higher incomes as adults.
“Black and White boys have very different outcomes even if they grow up in two-parent families with comparable incomes, education and wealth, live on the same city block, and attend the same school,” say the authors.
“This finding suggests that many widely discussed proposals may be insufficient to narrow the BlackWhite gap themselves, and suggest potentially new directions for policies to consider.” —