Springfield News-Sun

Corporate social justice programs in U.S. don’t work

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

According to a new report from The Washington Post, America’s corporatio­ns have committed “at least” $49.5 billion to the cause of “racial justice” since the George Floyd murder last year riveted our national attention on race.

This amounts to a little over $1,100 for every Black man, woman and child in America.

Or, from another perspectiv­e, about $16,500 for every Black household earning $25,000 or less.

But we’re not talking about corporate America, despite their deep concern for racial justice, just simply giving Black Americans cash. As much as they undoubtedl­y care about these Black citizens, they would never trust them to just take the money and spend properly.

These corporate executives nationwide have concluded that they can justify taking a huge chunk of their shareholde­rs’ funds — an amount equal to the entire economy of the state of Alaska — and spend it in a way that will produce more racial justice.

It is reasonable to ask why they believe they can achieve this.

It goes against all experience we have had with government.

The federal government has been spending trillions since the war on poverty began in the 1960s — $20 trillion, by some estimates — and the incidence of poverty over these years has hardly budged.

Apparently, these corporate executives feel they have some insight that has eluded politician­s all these years.

A large percentage of these funds is earmarked for loans and investment­s in housing and business loans.

According to the report, $28 billion flows from a pledge by Jpmorgan Chase to move 40,000 families into home ownership over the next five years.

But, again, special loans and grants to encourage minority home ownership are nothing new.

Government has been doing this for years, causing more damage than good.

Most should recall that we had a major financial crisis in our country in which we saw a collapse in financial markets in 2008 that was the worst since the Great Depression.

According to research at the American Enterprise Institute, this collapse was driven by the bursting of a highly inflated bubble in housing prices, the result of widespread deteriorat­ion in lending standards driven by government affordable housing goals and mandates . ...

Why have so many in corporate America signed off on left-wing dogma that American principles — principles of protection of life, of liberty, of property — are the problem rather than the solution?

A healthy portion of American Blacks are doing very well because of these American principles.

Per the Census Bureau’s recent annual report — Income and Poverty in the United States, 2019 — a larger percentage of Black households, 29.4%, were earning $75,000 or more than the percentage earning $25,000 or less, 28.7%. ...

I started promoting the idea 25 years ago of releasing low-income earners from the Social Security payroll tax and allowing them to invest those funds in a personal retirement account. Back then, the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at 10,000. Today, it stands at 35,000.

The very naysayers I heard back then are the ones bleating today about unfairness and the wealth gap.

Rather than betraying the tradition of free enterprise capitalism that built corporate America, America’s corporatio­ns should be promoting these values. This is the path to more prosperity, more justice, for all Americans.

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