Los Angeles Times

Unemployme­nt’s intentiona­l race gap

- BY KATHRYN A. EDWARDS Kathryn A. Edwards is an economist at the nonprofit, nonpartisa­n Rand Corp. who researches labor and employment issues.

Unemployme­nt insurance is serving a vital role in stabilizin­g the economy and supporting the households of 25 million workers. At the same time, its failings have been on display.

Florida started the recession with a computer system that appears to have been designed to discourage applicatio­ns. The maximum benefit offered by 14 states is not enough to replace 50% of wages for the average high school graduate. Seventeen states have depleted their trust funds and have had to get loans from the federal government.

There’s a long- standing accusation leveled at the country’s unemployme­nt insurance system that has been revived lately — that it’s structural­ly racist, deliberate­ly discrimina­tory from the outset and remains so today.

The claim has been met with doubt. Some suggest that the disparity in benefits available to Black and white Americans is skewed by lower wages in the American South, where a large share of Black workers live. Other skeptics have argued that Black workers wait longer for benefits and are less likely to receive them because they are disproport­ionately low- wage workers, and unemployme­nt insurance has minimum earnings requiremen­ts. It’s not intentiona­l that Black workers benefit less; it’s incidental.

But underlying the debate is a legitimate question: Why doesn’t unemployme­nt insurance treat all workers and all earnings the same?

Both “old- age insurance” — what we call Social Security — and unemployme­nt insurance were created with the Social Security Act, passed by Congress in 1935. The federal government would run the old- age program, while states would run the unemployme­nt program. Both were social- insurance programs, meaning that workers paid into trust funds via a payroll tax, and this made them eligible for benefits. Both programs excluded certain occupation­s, including domestic workers and agricultur­al workers.

Excluding domestic and agricultur­al workers from the unemployme­nt program was to the detriment of Black people, most of whom lived in the South. This much is widely agreed upon. By virtue of their occupation­s, about 65% of Black workers at the time fell outside the act, compared with 27% of white workers.

Seventy- f ive years after the bill’s passing, the Social Security Administra­tion offered a detailed explanatio­n for why excluding the majority of Black workers was not the result of “prevailing racial biases.”

The agency’s case goes like this. The bill also excluded many white workers, women and other groups, including Latino and Asian workers. Most unemployme­nt compensati­on programs in other countries in the 1930s excluded agricultur­al workers. Moreover, the federal government was enacting programs on a scale never before done. There was almost no history of federal benefits of any kind. In short, there was no racial motivation to the design of the legislatio­n; it was administra­tive necessity.

The counter- argument goes like this. There was racist intent behind the exclusions, and it is evident in a political devil’s bargain that Northern Democrats made with Southern Democrats. In order to get enough votes in Congress to pass most New Deal legislatio­n, Northern Democrats had to give Southern Democrats the means to exclude Black people from receiving benefits. An economical­ly empowered Black worker posed a political threat to Southerner­s and an existentia­l threat to segregatio­nist social structures. The bill was designed to exclude Black workers and enable Southern states to further exclude them; it was political necessity.

Of course, it could have been both administra­tively and politicall­y advantageo­us to leave Black workers behind — which happens to be precisely what Black advocates said at the time.

As the bill was being debated, Charles Houston, representi­ng the NAACP, testified in front of the Senate. Houston made it plain to Congress that it was deliberate­ly excluding Black workers. “From a Negro’s point of view,” he said, “it looks like a sieve with the holes just big enough for the majority of Negroes to fall through.”

George Haynes, of the Federal Council of Churches, also testified before the Senate. He pleaded with Congress to prohibit racial discrimina­tion in the administra­tion of the benefits. He presented data — tables documentin­g federal funding for universiti­es, vocational education and earlier New Deal programs — as evidence of racial disparitie­s.

“There has been repeated widespread discrimina­tion on account of race or color,” Haynes said, “as a result of which Negro men and women and children did not share equitably and fairly in the benefits accruing from the expenditur­es of public funds.”

Houston and Haynes made the same case. The design of unemployme­nt insurance would prevent Black workers from obtaining benefits. The excluded occupation­s disqualifi­ed the majority of Black workers, particular­ly Southern sharecropp­ers. And allowing states to administer the benefits would only open the door for more discrimina­tion.

The assessment that unemployme­nt insurance is structural­ly racist is based not on the expressed animus of past lawmakers but, rather, on the design of the program and who it intentiona­lly or incidental­ly leaves out.

There was no mistaking who the bill would leave behind. Congress had no intention of creating a program that treated white and Black workers the same. They didn’t miss the mark on racial equality. They weren’t aiming for it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States