Report: Little progress in 50 years
The report looked at how African-Americans fared on homeownership, unemployment and incarceration.
Convened to examine the causes of civil unrest in black communities, a presidential commission issued a 1968 report with a stark conclusion: America was moving towards two societies, “one black, one white — separate and unequal.”
Fifty years after the historic Kerner Commission identified “white racism” as the key cause of “pervasive discrimination in employment, education and housing,” there has been no progress in how AfricanAmericans fare in comparison to whites when it comes to homeownership, unemployment and incarceration, according to a report by the Economic Policy Institute released on Monday.
In some cases, AfricanAmericans are worse off today than they were before the civil rights movement culminated in laws barring housing and voter discrimination as well as racial segregation.
In 2017, 7.5 percent of African Americans were unemployed, compared with 6.7 percent in 1968 — still roughly twice the white unemployment rate.
The rate of homeownership, one of the most important ways for workingand middle-class families to build wealth, has remained virtually unchanged for AfricanAmericans in the last 50 years. Black homeownership remains just over 40 percent, trailing 30 points behind whites, who have seen modest gains in that time.
The share of incarcerated African-Americans has nearly tripled from 1968 to 2016 — one of the largest and most depressing developments in the last 50 years, especially for black men, researchers said. African-Americans are 6.4 times more likely than whites to be jailed or imprisoned, compared with 5.4 times more likely in 1968.
“We have not seen progress because we still have not addressed the issue of racial inequality in this country,” said John Schmitt, an economist and vice president of the Economic Policy Institute, citing the racial wealth gap and continuing racial discrimination in the labor and housing markets. “One of the key issues is the disadvantages so many AfricanAmericans face, right from the very beginning as children.”
The wealth gap between white and black Americans has more than tripled in the last 50 years, according to Federal Reserve data. The typical black family had zero wealth in 1968. Today the median net worth of white families — $171,000 — is 10 times that of black families.
The wealth black families have accumulated is negligible when it comes to the amount of money needed to meet basic needs during retirement, pay for children’s college education, put a down payment on a house, or cope with a job loss or medical crisis, Schmitt said.
The lack of economic progress is especially startling given that that black educational attainment has improved significantly in the last five decades, Schmitt said. AfricanAmericans are almost as likely as whites to have completed high school. In 1968, just 54 percent of blacks graduated from high school compared with 75 percent of whites. Today, more than 90 percent of African-Americans have a high school diploma, just 3 percentage points shy of the white high school completion rate.
The share of young African-Americans with a college degree has more than doubled to 23 percent since 1968, though blacks are still half as likely as whites to have completed college.
Yet the hourly wage of a typical black worker grew by just 0.6 percent a year since 1968. African-Americans make only 82.5 cents of every dollar earned by the typical white worker, the report said. And the typical black household today earns only 61.6 percent of the annual income of white households, with black college graduates continuing to make less than white college graduates.
Despite the poverty rate dropping from more than a third of black households in 1968 to about a fifth of black households, AfricanAmericans are 2.5 times more likely to be in poverty than whites.