New York Post

PRICE OF RACISM

Citi: It cost economy $16 trillion over 20 years

- By THORNTON McENERY

A Wall Street bank just put a price tag on racism in America, and it’s a steep one.

A new study from New York-based megabank Citigroup found that the US economy has lost out on $16 trillion in growth over the last 20 years because of discrimina­tory policies in wage growth, education access, homeowners­hip and lending to minority-owned businesses.

The latter accounts for the biggest chunk of the losses by far, with the bank blaming $13 trillion worth of losses on American banks’ reluctance to lend to black-owned businesses. Wage inequality came in a distant second as a cause, costing $2.7 trillion.

The study’s authors likewise found that $5 trillion could be added to US economic growth over the next five years if these inequaliti­es are addressed now.

“These gaps exist based on systemic issues that caused and continue to cause discrimina­tion against Blacks over the years,” read a Citi statement announcing the study. “The gaps in many cases remain wide 60 years after the Civil Rights Movement.”

In addition to highlighti­ng lopsided incarcerat­ion rates and voter suppressio­n in urban districts, Citi’s report found that the gap between white and minority homeowners­hip widened even as homeowners­hip in the US as a whole has soared since 1980.

Citi’s research also found that while pay discrepanc­y between white women and white men has narrowed slightly since 2000, it has stayed consistent or widened for every minority group. Black unemployme­nt has also stayed well above the other groups, regardless of the strength of the overall job market.

The claims are bold, and City is putting some of its money where its data are.

On Wednesday, it announced it would be spending $1 billion as part of its “Action for Racial Equity” initiative. The money will be spent on strategic initiative­s, including a $350 million commitment to black-owned businesses.

Citi is the most global of the so-called Big Four US banks, and is not known for its small-business lending. There were multiple reports early this year that the bank has plans to grow in that area.

The study’s introducti­on was written by Citi Vice Chairman Raymond McGuire, one of the bank’s most senior black executives, and, as The Post reported in July, a potential candidate for New York City mayor in 2021.

The 63-year-old Harvard-educated banker, who for months has been talking to financiers and city politicos about a mayoral run, is the global head of corporate and investment banking at Citi, giving him some purview over the study.

“I write this forward as Citi’s Vice Chairman and Chairman of our Global Banking, Capital Markets and Advisory business, but my journey began at the bottom,” McGuire writes before delving into his parents’ experience­s growing up in the Jim Crow South, and his childhood in Dayton, Ohio.

“Yet even today, with all those credential­s and as one of the leading executives on Wall Street, I am still seen first as a six-foot-four, two-hundredpou­nd Black man wherever I go — even in my own neighborho­od,” he writes. “I could have been George Floyd.”

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