The Denver Post

Black workers’ wage gap has widened, and the reasons are hard to explain

- By Jeanna Smlalek and Jordyn Holman

Black workers earn less than their white counterpar­ts in a worsening trend that holds even after accounting for difference­s in age, education, job type and geography, new Federal Reserve research shows.

In 1979, the average black man in America earned 80 percent as much per hour as the average white man. By 2016, that shortfall had worsened to 70 percent, according to research last week from the San Francisco Fed, which found the divide also had widened for black women.

“Especially troubling is the growing unexplaine­d portion of the divergence in earnings for blacks relative to whites,” San Francisco Fed Research Director Mary Daly and her fellow authors wrote in the report, adding that this could owe to hard-to-measure factors including discrimina­tion or school-quality difference­s.

“The opportunit­y to succeed is at the foundation of our dynamic economy. In this context, large and persistent shortfalls for African-americans, or any other group, are troubling,” they wrote.

The San Francisco Fed’s study marks a growing focus by the U.S. central bank on inequality and the lagging employment performanc­e of U.S. minorities. Chair Janet Yellen has talked about the subject, and the Philadelph­ia and Minneapoli­s Feds have set up institutes to study inequality and social mobility. The increased attention stands in contrast to the past, when the topic was rarely investigat­ed by Fed research staff or broached by officials, who viewed the problem as outside their remit for monetary policy.

The new research, which highlights the persistenc­e of a racial wage gap 50 years after the passage of the U.S. landmark antidiscri­mination Civil Rights Act, points to a problem for politician­s and policy makers: It’s tough to address disparitie­s if it’s impossible to measure what’s driving them.

The fact that the gap has lingered and even worsened over time also means that a stronger labor market, which politician­s often cite as a remedy for black workers’ economic disadvanta­ge, probably won’t permanentl­y narrow the divide.

“A job is the first condition, but it’s really not a sufficient condition to fix disparitie­s,” Daly said.

Black workers have consistent­ly higher unemployme­nt than their white counterpar­ts, but that divide is highly cyclical: In strong labor markets, it shrinks, but then it skyrockets again during recessions. Black wage gaps change less across business cycles.

The fact that black workers earn less is a problem in part because it limits their chances at moving up the income ladder. Lower wages can make it harder to afford time off for education and training, for instance.

And it’s particular­ly worrying that the black-white gap is climbing on the back on unexplaina­ble factors. While a sizable portion of the racial wage divide arises from the different industries and occupation­s black people work in, their education levels, and their ages, the share owing to factors that aren’t traceable accounts for much of the growth in the wage gap over time.

In 1979, about 8 percentage points of the earnings gap for men was hard to explain, and by 2016, that had risen to 13 percentage points — just under half the total earnings gap.

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