Starkville Daily News

Netflix invests $10M in Black-owned credit union in south

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Netflix on Tuesday announced a $10 million investment in a Mississipp­i-based credit union to build economic opportunit­ies in Black communitie­s across the Deep South.

The Netflix deposit is one of the first investment­s in the $100 million initiative by Hope Credit Union to make more business, mortgage and consumer loans to lowincome families.

Over the next two years, the Netflix donation will support financing to more than 2,500 entreprene­urs, homebuyers and consumers of color, according to Hope.

Hope is the only depository institutio­n in several communitie­s, including Itta Bena, a majority Black Mississipp­i Delta town, with a poverty rate is 42% and median household income is $20,417, according to a Hope news release.

Because many of its customers are low-income, Hope cannot garner the capital of larger, multi-national banks to invest in its communitie­s.

Hope CEO Bill Bynum said on Tuesday that left unchecked, America’s racial wealth gap will grow even wider.

“On a per capita basis, financial institutio­ns owned or led by people of color are the most effective way to fuel economic mobility and prosperity for people and places from which wealth has been extracted for generation­s,” Bynum said in a statement. “If other companies followed Netflix’ example, hundreds of billions could be invested toward closing debilitati­ng opportunit­y gaps that create division and limits America’s immense potential.”

In a blog post on Tuesday,

Aaron Mitchell, director of Netflix’s talent acquisitio­n, and Shannon Alwyn, the company’s treasury director, said the investment in Hope is one step in the direction of bridging the economic gap between white families and families of color.

According to the FDIC, roughly six out of 10 people living in the service area of Black owned banks are Black, in contrast to six out of 100 for banks that are not Blackowned.

Since its founding in 1994, Hope has generated more than $2.5 billion in financing that has benefited more than 1.5 million people in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Tennessee.

Tuesday’s investment is among the first made by Netflix in financial institutio­ns and other organizati­ons that directly support Black communitie­s in the U.S., according to the news release.

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