The Columbus Dispatch

Black women make strides in education, work, but still fall short

- By Vanessa Williams

A new report about the nation’s black women paints a familiar portrait of a group that is working hard on many levels to achieve the American Dream but is still falling short.

Black women vote at high rates, have made significan­t improvemen­t in earning college degrees and are succeeding in opening their own businesses, according to a report titled “The Status of Black Women in the United States.” Yet they continue to be underrepre­sented in elected office, earn less than white men and women, and are twice as likely as white women to be incarcerat­ed, the report says.

“They have all the makings of what should be success, yet their contributi­ons are undervalue­d and under compensate­d,” states the report, released this week by the National Domestic Workers Alliance. The report was prepared by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, a nonprofit organizati­on affiliated with George Washington University.

The report’s findings are similar to previous studies on the state of black women in the country, including a widely discussed 2014 paper by the Black Women’s Roundtable titled, “Black Women in the United States, Progress and Challenges.”

Here are some of the key findings:

■ More than six in 10 black women are in the workforce. But between 2004 and 2014, black women’s median annual earnings declined by 5 percent. As of 2014, black women who worked full time and year-round had median annual earnings that were 64.6 percent of that of white men.

■ The number of businesses owned by black women increased 178 percent between 2002 and 2012, the largest increase among all racial groups. In 2012, black women owned 15.4 percent of all womenowned businesses in the United States. Yet nationwide, businesses owned by black women had the lowest average sales per firm.

■ The share of black women with at least a bachelor’s degree increased by 23.9 percent between 2004 and 2014. About 22 percent of black women older than 25 had a bachelor’s degree or advanced degree in 2014, a higher level than black men, but lower than other racial and ethnic groups.

■ Nearly a quarter of the nation’s black women, 24.6 percent, live in poverty, more than twice the percentage of white women.

■ Black women were twice as likely as white women to be imprisoned in 2014.

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