Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Virus has Black businesses ailing

Many lack the access to loans and get less aid from federal programs

- By Lauren Leatherby The New York Times

The coronaviru­s pandemic will shutter many small businesses. And early evidence shows it is disproport­ionately hurting Blackowned small businesses.

More than 40% of Black business owners reported they weren’t working in April, when businesses were feeling the worst of the pandemic’s economic consequenc­es. Only 17% of white small-business owners said the same, according to an analysis of government data by Robert Fairlie of the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Many small businesses are struggling during the pandemic because they lack easy access to loans and cannot easily move their businesses online. Black-owned businesses tend to have fewer employees than other small businesses. They are also more likely to be in industries like restaurant­s or retail that lockdowns have hit especially hard, said Ken Harris, president of the National Business League, an organizati­on founded by Booker T.

Washington in 1900.

“Most lack the capacity, scale and technical assistance needed to survive a pandemic,” Harris said.

Black-owned businesses also appear to be benefiting less from federal stimulus programs. Only 12% of Black and Hispanic business owners polled between April 30 and May 12 received the funding they had requested. About one quarter received some funding. By contrast, half of all small businesses reported receiving from a single part of the stimulus packages — the Paycheck Protection Program — according to a census survey.

“Black businesses often don’t have a traditiona­l banking partner,” Harris said. Without such a partner, many had trouble applying for assistance.

The disproport­ionate struggles facing Black small-business owners come as their communitie­s are already bearing the brunt of public health crises: Black people are more than twice as likely as other Americans to die of the coronaviru­s and more likely to be victims of police violence.

Juliet Anderson owns two businesses, a salon and a children’s party place, on the same block in the Bronx borough of New York. Both have been closed for three months, she said, and neither has received financial assistance.

“It’s been a consistent roller coaster trying to get help,” Anderson said. “As far as I know, most of the people that are in our area have gotten nothing or the bare minimum, and they’re still waiting. It’s a heightened frustratio­n. We don’t know if we’re even going to be able to make it.”

Black entreprene­urs, especially women, have been starting businesses at a higher rate than the rest of the population in recent years. But Black-owned businesses seem to be struggling in part because they entered the lockdown in less secure shape than many other companies. As of 2019, the overwhelmi­ng majority of businesses in majority Black and Hispanic neighborho­ods did not have enough cash on hand to pay for two weeks’ worth of bills.

Lawrence Katz, an economist at Harvard, said he was concerned that the pandemic could hollow out lower-income neighborho­ods, where job and income loss has been greater. That, in turn, would amplify the already great wealth and income disparitie­s between rich and poor as well as between white and nonwhite Americans.

“We’re resilient people. African Americans, we’ve been through so much,” said Millie Peartree, owner of Millie Peartree Catering, who has shifted during the outbreak to feeding essential workers and hungry children in the Bronx. “I’m always going to find a way.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/AP ?? Stephanie Byrd, co-owner of The Block in Detroit, says she is worried Black-owned businesses will struggle to withstand the pandemic.
PAUL SANCYA/AP Stephanie Byrd, co-owner of The Block in Detroit, says she is worried Black-owned businesses will struggle to withstand the pandemic.

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