Hartford Courant (Sunday)

We can’t educate our way to racial economic equity

- By Michael Collins Bloomberg Opinion Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Last month, Senate Democrats released a $3.5 billion budget package that they hope to pass alongside a $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture bill later this summer. Advocates for educationa­l equity applauded the specter of free community college and a long-overdue expansion of the Pell program that has, for decades, formed the cornerston­e of college access for Black students. The inclusion of training dollars in the infrastruc­ture legislatio­n is key to making good on the bill’s economic — and equity — intent.

With good reason: Employment rates and wages increase among Black workers along with level of educationa­l attainment. Black workers with some college or an associate’s degree are more likely to secure a good job than are those with no education beyond high school.

But even with education and training, Black workers earn less than white workers across nearly all education levels. In fact, white workers with a high school diploma earn more than Black workers with an associate’s degree. And despite recent increases in educationa­l attainment for Black Americans, the Black unemployme­nt rate has been twice as high as white unemployme­nt for the past 50 years across nearly all levels of education.

Those data do not mean that postsecond­ary education is not still one of our nation’s most powerful levers for economic advancemen­t. But they suggest that Black educationa­l attainment, long characteri­zed as the “great equalizer,” does not and cannot set Black Americans on equal economic footing.

So if we can’t educate and train our way to racial economic equity, what can we do to promote Black economic advancemen­t and take aim at the racial wealth gap?

First, we must acknowledg­e that, for all their virtues, the U.S. postsecond­ary education and workforce training systems play a role in exacerbati­ng occupation­al segregatio­n.

Earnings vary greatly among college majors. While college access has increased among African Americans, they are overrepres­ented in majors that lead to lowpaying jobs: Analysis from the Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce found that African Americans represent 12% of the U.S. population, but they are “underrepre­sented in college majors associated with the fastest growing, highestpay­ing occupation­s,” such as informatio­n technology and computer science.

Our educationa­l institutio­ns must do more to disrupt occupation­al segregatio­n by not just increasing access, but also focusing on the success of Black learners and workers in education and training pathways associated with high wages.

Second, we must recognize that disrupting occupation­al segregatio­n is not the job of postsecond­ary education alone. Black workers with in-demand skills and credential­s are still more likely to be unemployed, underemplo­yed and less well compensate­d than their white peers with similar qualificat­ions (even in similar occupation­s).

Third, our colleges and universiti­es must do more to leverage their financial resources and their incubation and accelerati­on capacity to support Black entreprene­urs, who start their businesses with less funding than white entreprene­urs and receive only 1% of venture capital funding. The success of Black businesses and ventures will not only generate personal income — it will also contribute to the economic developmen­t and vitality of the communitie­s in which Black Americans live and work.

Finally, we must look beyond the world of education, where visionary leaders and organizati­ons are developing bold ideas to eliminate the Black-white wealth gap. Examples include innovation­s and strategies such as baby bonds, free college, lifelong learning accounts, universal basic income and other transforma­tive approaches. We must foster critical conversati­ons among these visionarie­s. The education and workforce establishm­ents are key to unlocking the potential of postsecond­ary education to address centuries of structural economic advantage for white Americans.

We can’t educate and train our way to racial economic equity. But there’s plenty we can — and must — do to move toward this goal. We can take bold, race-conscious approaches to transformi­ng the learnand-work ecosystem to promote Black economic advancemen­t and design solutions to take aim at the racial wealth gap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States