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Abstract

Despite an enormous and persistent black-white wealth gap, the ascendant American narrative is one that proclaims that our society has transcended the racial divide. The proclamation often is coupled with the claim that remaining disparities are due primarily to dysfunctional behavior on the part of blacks. In such a climate it appears the only acceptable remedial social policies are those that are facially race neutral. However, even without the capacity to redistribute assets directly on the basis of race, our nation still can do so indirectly by judiciously using wealth as the standard for redistributive measures. We offer a bold progressive child development account type program that could go a long way towards eliminating the racial wealth gap. KeywordsRacial wealth gap-Post Racial America-Child development accounts
Can Baby BondsEliminate the Racial Wealth Gap
in Putative Post-Racial America?
Darrick Hamilton &William Darity Jr.
Published online: 19 October 2010
#Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010
Abstract Despite an enormous and persistent black-white wealth gap, the ascendant
American narrative is one that proclaims that our society has transcended the racial
divide. The proclamation often is coupled with the claim that remaining disparities are
due primarily to dysfunctional behavior on the part of blacks. In such a climate it
appears the only acceptable remedial social policies are those that are facially race
neutral. However, even without the capacity to redistribute assets directly on the basis
of race, our nation still can do so indirectly by judiciously using wealth as the standard
for redistributive measures. We offer a bold progressive child development account
type program that could go a long way towards eliminating the racial wealth gap.
Keywords Racial wealth gap .Post Racial America .Child development accounts
Despite an enormous and persistent black-white wealth gap, the ascendant American
narrative is one that proclaims that our society has transcended the racial divide. The
proclamation often is coupled with the claim that remaining disparities are due primarily to
dysfunctional behavior on the part of blacks. In such a climate it appears the only
acceptable remedial social policies are those that are facially race neutral. However, even
without the capacity to redistribute assets directly on the basis of race, our nation still can
do so indirectly by judiciously using wealth as the standard for redistributive measures.
Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
DOI 10.1007/s12114-010-9063-1
African American Economic Summit, Duke University and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
D. Hamilton (*)
The Milano Graduate School, Urban Policy, Department of Economics, Schwartz Center for
Economic Policy Analysis, The New School, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011, USA
e-mail: hamiltod@newschool.edu
W. Darity Jr.
African and African-American Studies and Economics, Sanford School of Public Policy,
Duke University, Box 90239, Durham, NC 27708-0239, USA
e-mail: William.Darity@duke.edu
Have we transcended race?
The post-racial ideology represents a shift from some acknowledgement of a social
responsibility for the condition of black America to a position where blacks need to get
over itand take personal responsibility.Its rhetoric argues that discrimination and other
social barriers are largely things of the past, that blacks now need to stop playing the
victim roleand recognize their own fault in the persistence of racial inequality.
Moreover, blacks are enjoined to stop making particularistic claims on America and solely
pursue programs of social change designed to reach all Americans. All of these sentiments
were expressed plainly by Barack Obama in his More Perfect Unionspeech in
Philadelphia during the campaign:
For the African-American community, that path means embracing the burdens of
our past without becoming victims of our past. It means continuing to insist on a full
measure of justice in every aspect of American life. But it also means binding our
particular grievancesfor better health care, and better schools, and better jobs
to the larger aspirations of all Americansthe white woman struggling to break
the glass ceiling, the white man whos been laid off, the immigrant trying to feed
his family. And it means taking full responsibility for our own livesby
demanding more from our fathers, and spending more time with our children, and
reading to them, and teaching them that while they may face challenges and
discrimination in their own lives, they must never succumb to despair or cynicism;
they must always believe that they can write their own destiny.
It should be noted that the post-racial perspective typically does acknowledge that
racial discrimination still exist. However, it tends to trivialize and downplay its
significance. For example, during his address at the 100
th
Anniversary of the
NAACP this past summer, Obama states that:
I understand that there may be a temptation among some to think that
discrimination is no longer a problem in 2009. And I believe that overall, there
probably has never been less discrimination in America than there is today...
But make no mistake: The pain of discrimination is still felt in America. By
African American women paid less for doing the same work as colleagues of a
different color and a different gender. By Latinos made to feel unwelcome in
their own country. By Muslim Americans viewed with the suspicion simply
because they kneel down to praise God. By our gay brothers and sisters, still
taunted, still attacked, still denied rights.
Both implicitly and explicitly, Obama is arguing that there is nothing unique about the
discriminatory barriers faced by black Americans today, and further, whatever
discriminatory barriers that they may face, are at their lowest point ever. However,
Obama does seem to uniquely target his personal responsibility rhetoric to blacks. What is
lacking from his discrimination narrative is the empirical evidence which indicates that
since the mid to late 1970s black-white wage inequality, along with the measured
component of that inequality attributable to discrimination, has remained roughly flat.
Indeed, the election of Barack Obama has given the discourse of post-
racialism added fuel. For example, after the 2008 presidential election, actor Will
208 Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
Smith proclaimed ...(a)ll of our excuses have been removed. TheresnoWhite
man trying to keep you down, because if he were trying to keep you down he
would have [also tried to keep] Obama down(John-Hall 2009).
The example of the ascendency of blacks to elite positions is the typical
evidence put forth by post-racialists. Common examples before Obama included
the hiring of black CEOs at fortune 500 corporations like AOL Time Warner and
American Express, the appointment of blacks at the highest level of the cabinet,
such as Secretary of State and National Security Advisor, as well as successful
black candidate in many major local and state-wide elections. Post-racialists
attempt to bolster their case by arguing that these examples of black
exceptionalism result from individual or familial acts of perseverance and hard
work. In fact, during his recent address at the 100
th
Anniversary celebration of
the NAACP, Barack Obama offers himself and the hard work and parenting
behavior of his mother as an example:
I was raised by a single mom. I didntcomefromalotofwealth.Igot
into my share of trouble as a child. My life could have easily taken a turn
for the worse. When I drive through Harlem or I drive through the South
Side of Chicago and I see young men on the corners, I say, there but for
thegraceofGodgoI.Theyre no less gifted than me. Theyre no less
talented than me.
But I had some breaks. That mother of mine, she gave me love; she pushed
me, she cared about my education; she took no lip; she taught me right from
wrong. Because of her, I had a chance to make the most of my abilities
What Obama omits in his narrative is the fact that his single mother had a Ph.
D., and the fact that he received an elite education both abroad in Indonesia and
domestically while on scholarship at one of the best private schools in Hawaii.
Instead, his narrative emphasizes the love, motivation and discipline that his
mother instilled, which presumably was lacking in the household of his black
inner city comparisons.
One of the biggest proponents of the post-racial narrative is the highly
acclaimed author, Charles Johnson. In the top story of the Summer 2008 edition
of the American Scholar, entitled The End of the Black American Narrative,
Johnson (2008) qualifies himself as a social theorist by describing how fictional
writers concerned with social issues use their craft to put forth narratives
addressing actual social experiences. His own social theory on race begins with
a tale of exploitation and victimization in his award winning novel, Middle
Passage. But, as a result of the successes of the civil rights movement, including
the Civil Rights Acts, the Voting Rights Acts, and the growth of the middle class,
he argues that that narrative has changedwe are now in a post-racial American
and that the narrative of black victimization is over. He asserts that it “…is no
longer the case that the essence of black American life is racial victimization and
disenfranchisement, a curse and condemnation, a destiny based on color in which
the meaning of ones life is thinghood, created even before one is born.But how
does the new and improved Charles Johnson narrative explain the racial wealth
gap, and the fact that this so called black middle class dramatically shrinks when
wealth is used as the indicator of class position?
Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216 209209
The role of the racial wealth gap in post-racial America
Wealth is a paramount indicator of social well being. Wealthier families are far better
positioned to finance elite independent school and college education, access capital to start
a business, finance expensive medical procedures, reside in higher amenity neighbor-
hoods, lower health hazards, etc.; exert political influence through campaign financing;
purchase better counsel if confronted with the legal system, leave a bequest, and/or
withstand financial hardship resulting from any number of emergencies,.
Wealth also is a dramatic indicator of black-white inequality. Using the 2002
Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) data, Kochhar (2004) estimates
a close to $90,000 median household net worth for white families in comparison to a
meager $8000 and $6000 net worth for Latino and black households, respectively.
1
The disparity is so pronounced that the median Latino and black household would
have to save 100% of their income for at least three consecutive years to close the
gap. Furthermore, 85% of black and Latino households have a net worth below the
median white household. Regardless of age, household structure, education,
occupation or income, black households typically have less than a quarter of the
wealth of otherwise comparable white households.
How can the post-racial discourse that race is no longer a defining feature of oneslife
chances, particularly for black families that have escaped concentrated poverty in inner-
city ghettos reconcile the enormous, persistent racial wealth gap. Moreover, the racial
wealth gap spans the demographics of age, education, marital status and income. The
smallest racial disparity exists for families in the third quartile of the racial income
distribution where the typical black family has 38% of the wealth of the typical white
family, whereas in the bottom income quartile (the group which contains the working
poor) is characterized by black families having a mere 2% of the wealth of the typical
white family in the same quartile. Perhaps even more disturbing the median wealth of
black families whose head graduated from college is less than the median wealth of white
families whose head dropped out of high school (Gittleman and Wolff 2004).
What are the conventional explanations of this disparity?
There are three main mechanisms that have been put forth to explain the racial wealth gap
consistent with the Obama-Johnson post-racial narrative. The first is the notion that in
search of immediate gratification blacks are less frugal when it comes to savings. But it has
not historically been the case, nor is it now the case, that blacks are more profligate than
whites. Economists ranging from Milton Friedman to Marjorie Galenson to the recently
deceased founder of the Caucus of Black Economists, Marcus Alexis, found that, after
accounting for household income, blacks have a slightly higher savings rate than whites.
More recently, Gittleman and Wolff (2004) also found blacks have a slight savings rate
1
Bucks et al. (2009) uses the 2007 Survey of Consumer Finance (SCF) and estimates 16 percent ratio of
non-white ($27,800) to white ($170,000) median household wealth. Although the SCF figures are more
current, because the study design surveyed a greater proportion of affluent households, the wealth statistics
are substantially higher for both groups than the earlier SIPP estimates. Further, as a result of sample size
issues related to oversampling affluent households, blacks and Latinos are not disaggregated from other
non-white groups in the results presented by Bucks et al. (2009).
210 Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
edge over whites, again after adjusting for household income. Furthermore, the mild black
savings rate advantage at most income levels is actually indicative of even greater black
frugality because blacks who attain higher incomes typically have a greater array of kin
and family obligations in assisting low-income relatives than whites, further reducing their
resources to save (Chiteji and Hamilton 2002; and Heflin and Pattillo 2000).
There is, however, a recent study by Ariel/Hewitt which finds that, relative to whites,
black employees at a sample of 57 large companies from a variety of industries have lower
participation and contribution rates to company sponsored 401(K) plans even after
controlling for salary, job tenure and age. Unfortunately, it is not clear from the study how
these attributes were controlled.
2
For example, the study includes a table that compares
participation rates across racial groups at various income brackets. The lowest
participation rate difference, one percentage point (92 versus 91%), occurs in the
highest income bracket (those earning above $120,000), while the greatest participation
rate difference, six percentage points (56 versus 50%), occurs in the lowest income
bracket (those earning below $30,000). Yet, the study finds that blacks are 7% less likely
to participate after controlling for salary, age and job tenure. This would suggest an
unlikely scenario that blacks are better positioned in terms of salary within the defined
income brackets and/or have longer job tenure and are older on average.
In addition, unlike the Gittleman and Wolff study, the Ariel/Hewitt study
examines individuals rather than household savings. Given that savings decisions
are often made at the household level, individual income controls are likely to be
inadequate when trying to determine savings rate behavior. Given the racial marriage
gap, it is likely that the black observations in their study had lower household
income levels to save, which would only be partially captured by individual salary
levels. Moreover, 60% of the black sample in the Ariel/Hewitt study consists of
females, while the comparable number for whites is 48%.
The second explanation that supports the post-racial narrative is the claim that
inferior black asset management has resulted in lower portfolio returns. However,
the Gittleman and Wolff (2004) study based on data before the subprime and
mortgage market crisis, finds no significant racial differences in asset appreciation
rates for families with positive assets. This is illustrative of additional evidence of
the post-racial mythology.
In addition to being more profligate and possessing low financial acumen, popular
discourse also attributes the racial wealth gap to a deficient entrepreneurial spirit on
the part of blacks. The discourse tends to focus on successful entrepreneurial
immigrants as examples of model minoritiesthat blacks should immolate.
Although, It is the case that Asian Immigrants in general have substantially more
business assets than blacks, careful examination by Tim Bates (1997); Darity (2005);
Darity and Hamilton 2009), Bogan and Darity (2008), and Masao Suzuki attribute this
advantage to higher levels initial financial capital, and selectivity associated with
immigration, rather than some group based model minorityentrepreneurial behavioral.
Migration is not a random occurrence, and leads to advantages resulting from
selection. These selectivity advantages are exhibited by three comparisons. First,
entrepreneurially successful immigrant groups enjoy initial financial and human
2
The actual methods and empirical results of the control exercise are not included in the paper, and
multiple attempt were made to solicit this information, but our requests were not fulfilled.
Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216 211211
capital advantages over their non-migrating countrymen. Second, these selective
immigrants are also more likely to engage in entrepreneurial activity than their U.S.
born ancestral linked peers, who presumably have similar cultural orientations.
Finally, there are varying degrees of success amongst Asian immigrant groups, and
this success is correlated with group level financial and human capital upon U.S.
entry.
Indeed financial capital is a key ingredient to start a successful business. Seventy-seven
percent of firms with employees and 59% of sole proprietors report that using personal or
family assets to start their business. Yet, from 1979 to 1987, 29% of black firms started
with no financial capital, whereas only 16% of Asian Immigrant firms were launched with
no financial capital. This figure is even substantially lower than the white rate of 23%.
The result is a very low ownership of business assets on the part of blacks. In
2002, blacks made up about 12% of the population, less than 5% of non-publicly
traded firms were black owned and these firms collectively received less than 1% of
total business receipts. In contrast, non-Latino whites represented about 68% of the
population, owned about 83% of all firms, and 93% of non-publically traded
business receipts.
So, what explains the racial wealth gap?
Careful economic studies actually demonstrate that inheritances, bequests and intra-
family transfers account for more of the racial wealth gap than any other
demographic and socioeconomic indicators including education, income and
household structure (see for example, Blau and Graham 1990; Menchik and
Jianakoplos 1997; Gittleman and Wolff 2004). These intra-familial transfers, the
primary source of wealth for most Americans with positive net worth, are transfers
of blatant non-merit resources. Why do blacks have vastly less resources to transfer
to the next generation?
Apart from the national failure to endow black ex-slaves with the promised forty
acres and a mule after the Civil War, blacks were deprived systematically of
property, especially land, accumulated between 1880 and 1910 by government
complicity, fraud, and seizures by white terrorists. During the first three decades of
the twentieth century prosperous black communities and the associated property
literally was destroyed by white rioters in communities ranging from Wilmington,
North Carolina to Tulsa, Oklahoma (Darity and Frank 2003; Darity 2008). The
historical use of restrictive covenants, redlining, and general housing and lending
discrimination were also factors that inhibited blacks from accumulating wealth
(Oliver and Shapiro 2006; and Katznelson 2005). Furthermore, Oliver and Shapiro
and Katznelson in separate studies document exclusion of blacks from post-
depression and World War II public policy which are largely responsible for the asset
development of an American middle class.
The biased treatment of blacks in asset markets is not limited to the past. For
example, a recent report (February 2009) on mortgage lending and race conducted
by the Institute on Race and Poverty at the University of Minnesota finds that black
Twin City residents in the highest earning categories (above $150,000) were twice as
likely to be denied a home loan than whites in the lowest earning category (below
212 Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
$40,000). It is also the case that among those fortunate (or unfortunate) enough to
actually get a loan, high earning blacks were more than three times as likely to be
offered a subprime loan than low earning whites.
It is also noteworthy that subprime loans are excluded from the Obama
administrations modified loanprogram. Indeed, Margaret Kimberly, an editor for
the Black Agenda Report, describes the current foreclosure crisis as a new form of
wealth transfer from black Americans.
Indeed, there is evidence that recessions disproportionately affect blacks and
Latinos. During an earlier recession (19992001), data presented by Kochhar (2004)
reveals that median household wealth fell by 27% each for Latinos and blacks, while
it grew by 2% for whites. We suspect that this current recession will lead to an even
greater widening of an already wide wealth gap. Although, whites are considerably
more likely than blacks to own their home, among blacks with positive net worth the
share of black wealth attributable to housing is nearly twice as large as the white
share (Gittleman and Wolff 2004). Coupled with the fact that blacks were far more
likely to be steered toward subprime loans in discriminatory credit markets, the
foreclosure crisis is bound to have a more deleterious effect on black than white wealth.
In addition, Tamara Nopper, a recent PhD. in sociology documents that as a result
of a policy shift in the U.S. Small Business Administration since 1980, the total
share of SBA loans and the share of the total dollar amount of these loans offered to
black borrowers declined dramatically. She attributes part of this decline to
administrative movements away from specific targets to black borrowers to a more
aggregate targeting that includes women and all minority groups. The result and
been a shift from black to other minorities, particularly Asians.
Of all the SBA loans distributed to minorities in 1980, roughly 40% of the
loans and 40% of the total dollar amount of these loans were directed to black
borrowers. In contrast less than 20% were distributed to Asians. However, by
2006, Asian borrowers received 43% of all minority loans and 64% of the total
dollar amount, while the comparable figures for black borrowers were 21 and
10%, respectively.
Perhaps part of this growth in lending towards Asians can be explained by their
increase in population share. This is not the case for non-Latino whites. Despite a
precipitous decline in their population share since 1980, the share of SBA loans
distributed to them has remained fixed around 70%.
Nopper (2010) also attributes the relative decline in black lending to a Small
Business Administrations policy shift from direct lending to the use of banks as
intermediaries via loan guarantees. Black borrowers conceivably had better access to
finance as a result of more relaxed SBA collateral and credit requirements, which, even
with loan guarantees, may not have been offered by commercial lenders. Also, as is
documented above, there is long established history of racial bias in commercial lending.
Another issue with the use of bank intermediaries is the relative shortage of black
banks. In a report produced at the end of 2008, the FDIC identified a total of 44
black banks with $7.5 billion in assets and 96 Asian and Pacific Islander banks with
a total of $53 billion in assets. Since ethnic banks disproportionately service co-
ethnic borrowers and co-ethnic communities, the given underrepresentation of black
banks, and reliance of banks to identify borrowers and distribute loans, creates a
structural impediment to black business creation and growth.
Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216 213213
Policies: what can the public sector do?
Given the importance of intergenerational transfers of wealth and past and
present barriers preventing black wealth accumulation, private action and market
forces alone cannot close an unjust racial wealth gap.public sector intervention
is necessary. Does the public sector have the resources to tackle the racial wealth
gap? The answer must be a resounding yes. The federal governments ability to
raise $70 billion for TARP, along with an additional $2.5 trillion to aid the ailing
financial system by April 2009 (see February 4, 2009 New York Times report) is
indicative of the governments ability to raise and leverage substantial sums of
funds quickly.
In addition, a report by the Corporation for Enterprise Development (CFED 2004)
estimates that, even before the current financial crises, the federal government
allocated $335 billion of its 2003 budget in the form of tax subsidies and savings to
promote asset development policies. This figure, which is 15 times higher than what
was spent on education, does not include subsidies or tax breaks given to
corporations nor funds from state and local level policies.
At issue is not the amount that was allocated, but to whom the allocation was
distributed. The top 1% of earners, those typically earning over $1 million dollars a
year, received about one-third of the entire allocation, while the bottom 60% of
earners received only 5%. Furthermore, individuals in the bottom 20% typically
received a measly $5 benefit from these policies. Perhaps if the federal asset
promotion budget where allocated in a more progressive manner, federal policies
could be transformative for low income Americans (see Sherraden 1991, for a
discussion on Assets and the Poor).
We are not optimistic about the public will to directly address the racial wealth
gap. Indeed, the surge in the post-racial perspective has moved the public sentiment
strongly away from race specific social policies. But all is not lost. Since the
distributions of white and non-white wealth are so disparate85% of black families
have wealth holdings below the median white familywealth can be an effective
non-race based instrument to eliminate racial inequality. A shift from an income
based means test to a wealth based means test for transfer programs. Policies with
eligibility based on net worth at some level below the national median would reach a
large proportion of black households and could go a long way towards closing the
racial wealth gap, especially if they include asset building dimensions
Modern electronic recording of financial data facilitates our ability to identify
financial assets. Financial monitoring advances made by IRS and law enforcement
agencies serve as examples of the public sectors ability to measure financial assets.
Further, many localities are already engaged in home value assessments. Electronic
home appraisals based on market valuations of area home sales, provide another
example to measure individual assets holdings. To avoid savings crowd out the
transfer program could be structured in a manner similar to the Earned Income Tax
Credit (EITC) program, which uses a phase out schedule to avoid work
disincentives. Finally, there may be a concern that the program may influence the
timing in which parents, grandparents or other relatives (or friends) might make
transfers to their off-springs so that the children of these off-springs can increase the
federal bond support in which they qualify. In order to address this concern, the
214 Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
federal government could tax future inheritance and bequests to bond recipients to
avoid the moral hazard from these family transfers.
Over the past 20 years demonstrationprograms designed to develop the asset
capacity of the poor have emerged. Two of the most notable are the American Dream
Demonstration (ADD) which uses Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) to
create match incentives for the poor to save, and the Savings for Education,
Entrepreneurship, and Down-payment (SEED) initiative which establishes Childrens
Development Accounts (CDA) (what Manny Marable refers to as Baby Bonds)to
create endowed trusts for children at birth. The original intent was for these asset
building strategies to be implemented universally in a progressive manner; however,
thus far, they have only served as demonstrations(Sherraden 2009).
The United Kingdom has moved beyond the demonstration stage. Beginning in
2005, every newborn in the UK receives a trust ranging from 250 to 500 pounds
depending on familial resources. Every year since 2004 the American Savings for
Personal Investment Retirement and Education (ASPIRE) is introduced in congress to
established universal CDAs in the U.S. (see Sherraden 2009 for more details). Since the
nations black president eschews race specific policies, perhaps a strongly amended
ASPIRE bill designed to progressively distribute funds based on familial net worth can
be the policy that enables him to bind[black Americas] grievances to the larger
aspirations of all Americans.
We envision a baby bondplan of much greater scale and magnitudeprogressively
rising to $50,000 or $60,000 for children in families in the lowest wealth quartile and
accessible once the child turns 18 years of age. These individual trusts could grow in
federally managed investment accounts with guarantees of at least 1.52% annual growth
rates. We also would determine eligibility for such a program based upon the net worth
position of the childs family rather than their income, e.g. all children whose families fell
below the national median for wealth would receive baby bonds.
Based on a crude estimate, the budget for the program would be less than 10% of
the non-war spending budget for the Department of Defense. There are about 4
million babies born each year in the US. If the average trust is set at $20,000 per
child and three-quarters of all newborns (3 million) are made eligible for the
program, the baby bond program would cost about $60 billion per annum. Although
this simple estimate does not incorporate costs resulting from increased fertility
incentives, it also does not incorporate savings resulting from reduction in other
federal transfer programs associated with better-resourced young adults.
Conclusion
Rather than a race-neutral America, the ideal should be a race-fair America. For that to
occur the transmission of racial economic advantage or disadvantage across generations
would have to cease. Indeed, in keeping with the most comprehensive norms of a post-
racial society, there should be no transmission of racial economic advantage or
disadvantage across generations for anyone. Public provision of a substantial trust fund
for newborns from families that are wealth-poor would go a long way toward achieving
the ideal. Until then, the historic election of the first self-identified black president
merely will buy the nation symbolic racial reconciliation on the cheap.
Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216 215215
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Further Reading
Ackerman B, Alstot A. The Stakeholder Society. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1999.
216 Rev Black Polit Econ (2010) 37:207216
... A large literature documents a significant, persistent gap in median net worth between White and Black households in the USA (Blau and Graham 1990;Altonji and Doraszelski 2005;Hamilton and Darity 2010;Williams 2017;Darity and Mullen 2020). In 2016, the median net worth of White households was 9.5 times the median net worth of Black households and 7.4 times the median net worth of Hispanic households (Authors' Calculations, Survey of Consumer Finances 2016). ...
... Given observed rates of return, the model suggests that Black households must discount the future less than White households in order to match observed patterns of consumption across race in the Consumer Expenditure Survey (CEX), effectively ruling out explanations of the racial wealth gap based on myopia or excessive time preference. Moreover, a simple welfare exercise suggests that policies aiming to equalize rates of return-such as Hamilton and Darity's (2010) Baby Bonds proposal-are welfare improving. ...
... In any case, it is clear that more aggressive policy efforts than those currently on the table will be needed to address racial differences in rates of return. Policies such as Hamilton and Darity's (2010) Baby Bonds proposal-a progressive system (conditional on net worth) of trust funds granted upon birth, deposited in federally managed investment accounts with guaranteed returns, and accessible once the child turns 18 years of age-fit this bill. In addition to directly reducing the racial wealth gap, by helping to equalize returns across race Baby Bonds have the added benefit of preventing the reemergence of the racial wealth gap in the future. ...
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Using data on household balance sheets from the Survey of Consumer Finances and data on macroeconomic rates of return from Jordà et al. (Q J Econ. 134(3):1225–1298, 2019) we construct two alternative series for household rates of return by race from 1989 to 2016. Our estimates suggest a persistent racial gap in the rate of return on assets between 1 and 4 percentage points. The gap in returns remains even after conditioning on demographic factors, labor market factors, credit history, portfolio composition, household attitudes toward savings, financial literacy, and inheritance—suggestive of a role for discrimination. Recentered influence function (RIF) decompositions indicate between 40 and 53%—1.2 to 1.6 percentage points—of the difference in median returns between Black and White households is unexplained by observable characteristics. A standard Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition suggests that differential rates of return can explain up to 14% of the racial wealth gap at the mean. Finally, our data on differential rates of return allow us to effectively rule out explanations for the racial wealth gap based on myopia or excessive time preference. Given observed series for consumption and rates of return, a standard lifecycle model requires Black households to discount the future less than White households in order to match the data.
... The forced seizure of black assets through racial violence and terrorism, the exclusion of black Americans from receiving benefits offered through the New Deal, the unequal distribution of G.I. Bill benefits in the years following World War II, and the proliferation of Jim Crow policies all contributed to the racial patterning of wealth in the United States throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries (Oliver and Shapiro 2013). Contemporary discrimination in the housing, lending, and labor markets further exacerbates racial wealth inequality by restricting black families' access to the same instruments of wealth accumulation as whites (Hamilton and Darity 2010). ...
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Wealth plays a unique role in shaping later-life health risk, but the relationship between wealth and child health remains largely unexplored. Using longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) (1994–2013), this study uses multilevel mixed-effects models and the parametric g-formula approach to both assess the relationship between household wealth and child body mass index (BMI) and identify the mechanisms linking wealth to child BMI. We find that household wealth is negatively associated with childhood BMI. In addition to finding a strong, direct association, we also find that household wealth indirectly patterns child BMI and obesity risk through household spending and family stress processes. These findings provide new insights into the links between wealth, child health, and early-life population health disparities.
... The hodgepodge of policies that do affect asset and debt accumulation include financial regulations, tax policies, and small, local, asset accumulation programs. President-elect Joe Biden has indicated support for several policies that would directly address wealth, including plans to provide relief from college debt, the establishment of "Baby Bonds," a child development account given to all children in the United States at birth (Hamilton and Darity 2010), and higher taxes on corporations and capital gains. Biden's plans would be the most comprehensive political effort to address wealth inequality, but it remains to be seen how many will come to fruition. ...
... Finally, the use of this platform of knowledge by individuals can then shape future entitlement rules to financial flows with all its complexity and uncertainty. From a topdown perspective, such a platform could inform policymakers on labor policies (e.g., a job guarantee [42] by demographic group), investment policies (e.g., targeting occupations and sectors supporting the job guarantee), and income and wealth policies (e.g., baby bonds [43] and inheritance tax [44] by demographic group). From a bottom-up perspective, such a platform could inform workers, managers, pensioners, students, men, and women, on the likely impact their daily financial choices have on jobs, savings, and investments by comparing business-as-usual earning choices and sustainable earning choices. ...
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The paper applies a methodological tool able to frame national policies with sustainable financial flows between social groups. In effect, exchange entitlement mapping (E-mapping) shows the interdependency of capital and labor earnings across social groups, which is then accounted for in the policy planning of future financial flows for the green transition. First, the paper highlights the extent to which herd behavior feeds into capital and labor earnings by social, occupational, demographic, and regional groups for the United Kingdom, France, and Italy over the past 40 years. Second, learning from these past trends, the paper proposes a policy framing of “sustainable earning trends” to hamper or facilitate financial flows towards sectors, occupations, and regions prone to herd behavior. The paper concludes that for an economic system to be resilient, it should be able to recycle external shocks on group earnings into economic opportunities for the green transition.
... Some studies have found universal social welfare programs (e.g., universal healthcare and education) boost social trust more than means-tested programs (154), but universal programs may also be costlier. Universal redistributive institutions such as 'baby bonds'-whereby governments provide all newborns with an illiquid sum of money that grows until the baby becomes an adult and can then access it-have been proposed (e.g., (155)) to address racial and class-based wealth gaps in the U.S., and could also enhance education access and youth opportunity. Similarly, housing vouchers that subsidize economically disadvantaged families to move to neighborhoods of their choosing (rather in geographically concentrated subsidized housing) has improved economic mobility in experiments (156), and could also promote integration. ...
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Economic growth in the 19th and 20th centuries, following the Industrial Revolutions, was much faster than in preceding centuries. This unprecedented global growth coincided with the global proliferation of democracy, with some evidence for bidirectional causation. Macroeconomic forecasts have predicted slower economic growth in the 21st century--perhaps substantially slower--for structural reasons such as aging populations, slowdowns in innovation, and debt. Long-run effects of COVID-19 and climate change could further slow growth. Moreover, some sustainability scientists assert that slower growth, stagnation, or even de-growth is an environmental imperative. Whether slow growth is inevitable or planned, we argue that democracies should prepare for additional fiscal and social stress--some of which is already apparent. Focusing on developed democracies, we propose that preparations should include efforts to: (i) reduce inequality; (ii) socially integrate diverse populations and build shared identities; (iii) increase economic opportunity for youth; (iv) improve return on investment in taxation and public spending; (v) strengthen formal democratic institutions; and (vi) invest in improving non-economic drivers of subjective well-being. Many aspects of our analysis likely also apply to other types of societies besides developed democracies.
... As scholars have begun to highlight the centrality of wealth, as opposed to income, in the challenge of economic inequality (Piketty, 2014;Sherraden, 1991), substantial effort has been devoted to identifying policies that might reduce this "racial wealth gap." Some popularly debated policies include tax credits to help first time homebuyers afford a down payment (Shapiro, 2004), "baby bonds" (Hamilton & Darity Jr., 2010), and elimination of the mortgage interest tax credit (Sullivan et al., 2017). At the same time, research also shows that some policies aimed at reducing economic inequality, such as eliminating student debt for all Americans, would actually exacerbate the racial wealth gap (Sullivan et al., 2015). ...
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Research has repeatedly argued that increasing the rate at which Black people start businesses could reduce the racial wealth gap between Black and white families, but increasing the rate of Black entrepreneurship may actually exacerbate the racial wealth gap, due to the economic cost associated with business closure. Using longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), we find that, as past work suggests, Black-owned businesses are less likely to remain open 4 years later, compared to white-owned businesses, and that, due to this disparity, Black business owners are more likely to experience downward economic mobility and less likely to experience upward mobility, compared to their white counterparts. These results suggest that improving the rate at which Black entrepreneurs succeed, rather than increasing the rate at which Black people become entrepreneurs, should be the target of efforts to leverage business ownership to reduce the racial wealth gap.
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Health equity means that everyone, regardless of their abilities, economic status, or race/ethnicity, has the opportunity to reach their optimal level of health. However, the inequitable distribution of resources, power, and privilege in the United States means that historically marginalized communities bear a disproportionate burden of poor health and disease. The COVID-19 pandemic has compounded the problem for Black Americans: already bearing an unequal burden of social, economic, and health inequities and experiencing systemic racism in various sectors of American life, Black Americans have been at even greater risk of COVID-19 transmission and severity of the disease. I use critical race theory (CRT) to show how key social and historical factors fuel racial health inequities. Further, I use key tenets of CRT to argue that redressing historical legacies of racism cannot be done without using a critical, race conscious lens and lifting up the voices of Black people.
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Wage inequalities between identical workers of different race, ethnicity, and gender are a persistent feature of labor markets. However, most labor market models either ignore important empirical evidence or focus very narrowly on specific labor market dynamics. To better understand such wage differences, we create a labor market model that integrates firm competition for workers, employee movement between jobs in response to market signals, potential monetary frictions in the job transition process, and workers' collective action which is a function of government support. Our model shows that because of gender- and race-specific historical and social outcomes, like the relatively lower household wealth of Black and Latino families and the increased household responsibilities of women, women and minority workers are more exploitable; employers can push their wage farther below the value of their marginal product. Also, our model shows that the cumulative wage gap for non-White women is greater than the additive gaps of being nonmale and non-White. Lastly, our model shows that a reduction in government support for collective action enables employers to wield monopsony power more freely, independent of changes in employer concentration. Because certain groups are more exploitable, employers' increased capability in wielding monopsony power means increased wage differentials replicating discriminatory biases against marginalized groups of workers.
Book
One in four American adults doesn't have a bank account. Low-income families lack access to many of the basic financial services middle-class families take for granted and are particularly susceptible to financial emergencies, unemployment, loss of a home, and uninsured medical problems. Insufficient Funds explores how institutional constraints and individual decisions combine to produce this striking disparity and recommends policies to help alleviate the problem. Mainstream financial services are both less available and more expensive for low-income households. High fees, minimum-balance policies, and the relative scarcity of banks in poor neighborhoods are key factors. Michael Barr reports the results of an in-depth study of financial behavior in 1,000 low- and moderate-income families in metropolitan Detroit. He finds that most poor households have bank accounts, but combine use of mainstream services with alternative options such as money orders, pawnshops, and payday lenders. Barr suggests that a tax credit for banks serving primarily disadvantaged customers could facilitate greater equality in the private financial sector. Drawing on evidence from behavioral economics, Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir show that low-income individuals exhibit many of the same patterns and weaknesses in financial decision making as middle-class individuals and could benefit from many of the same financial aids. They argue that savings programs that automatically enroll participants and require them to actively opt out in order to leave the program could drastically increase savings ability. Ronald Mann demonstrates that significant changes in the credit market over the past fifteen years have allowed companies to expand credit to a larger share of low-income families. Mann calls for regulations on credit card companies that would require greater disclosure of actual interest rates and fees. Raphael Bostic and Kwan Lee find that while home ownership has risen dramatically over the past twenty years, elevated risks for low-income families-such as foreclosure-may well outweigh the benefits of owning a home. The authors ultimately argue that if we want to demand financial responsibility from low-income households, we have an obligation to assure that these families have access to the banking, credit, and savings institutions that are readily available to higher-income families. Insufficient Funds highlights where and how access is blocked and shows how government policy and individual decisions could combine to eliminate many of these barriers in the future.
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As revolution swept over Russia and empires collapsed in the final days of World War I, Azerbaijan and neighbouring Georgia and Armenia proclaimed their independence in May 1918. During the ensuing two years of civil war, military endgames, and treaty negotiations, the diplomatic representatives of Azerbaijan struggled to gain international recognition and favourable resolution of territorial disputes. This brief but eventful episode came to an end when the Red Army entered Baku in late April 1920. Drawing on contemporary records, memoirs, and scholarship in many languages, the accomplished historian Jamil Hasanli has produced a comprehensive and meticulously documented account of this little-known period
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This article critically interrogates how colorblind racial ideology and the disadvantage thesis, a common explanation for immigrant entrepreneurship, rhetorically inform one another. I interview 81 representatives of Korean banks and seven US federal government institutions to determine how they explain the concentration of Korean immigrants in USA-based entrepreneurship. Consistent with the sociological literature, I find that respondents cite disadvantage as the main reason for Korean immigrants’ over-representation in small business ownership. Also consistent with the literature are respondents’ emphases on Koreans’ group-level characteristics as mediating factors against disadvantage. I analyze how three dimensions of colorblind racial ideology are embedded in respondents’ discourse; these three dimensions include the minimization of the role of racial ideologies and major institutions in shaping socioeconomic patterns, the promotion of cultural racism, and the incorporation of Asian Americans into a universal immigrant paradigm.
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Making use of PSID data for 1984, 1989, and 1994, we examine race differences in patterns of asset accumulation. Our results indicate, as expected, that inheritances raise the rate of wealth accumulation of whites relative to that of African Americans. But, while whites devote a greater share of their income to saving, racial differences in saving rates are not significant, once we control for income. Though our results may be period-specific, we also do not find evidence that the rate of return to capital is greater for whites than for African Americans. Simulations suggest that African Americans would have gained significant ground relative to whites during the period if they had inherited similar amounts, saved at the same rate, had comparable income levels and, more speculatively, had portfolios closer in composition to those of whites.