Report: ‘Racial Rules’ Widen Economic Inequality for African Americans
Great article.
The income gap between rich and the poor Americans is the highest it has been in nearly 100 years, but the racial inequality gap is even wider. From high school graduates to graduate degree holders, black men and women today continue to earn less than similarly skilled white men and women. Yet missing from this conversation is a full understanding of the historical forces that have constrained African American earning power.
The Washington-based Roosevelt Institute, a nonprofit economic think tank, recently released the study, Rewrite the Racial Rules: Building an Inclusive American Economy, that explains how the countrys racial history affects the national economic landscape that African Americans must navigate. A series of racial rules has really set the foundation for the racial and economic inequality, explains Andrea Flynn, an Institute fellow who co-authored the study.
By 1980, the economic progress that blacks made during the civil rights era had plateaued. Today, explains Flynn, theres a perception that were all starting from the same place. That perception colors how whites evaluate African American success: 66 percent of adults, including 71 percent of whites and 53 percent of blacks, believe that the primary reason that blacks cant get ahead lies with personal shortcomings and not discrimination.
Yet American workplaces remain highly segregated. After 1980, many employment sectors lost ground on diversity: Between 2001 and 2005, nearly one-third of all industries, including transportation services and banking showed a trend toward resegregation among white men and black men.
The report concludes that race-neutral rules wont work since slavery and Jim Crow produced discriminatory attitudes and practices that have been difficult to eradicate and still pervade American society today, noting that The enduring legacy of black slavery is built into our current institutions, policies, programs, and practices and has multigenerational impacts on the life chances and outcomes of black Americans.
The report suggests that in order to create a more inclusive economy, the U.S. still must rely on racially explicit affirmative action policies and anti-discrimination mandates. African Americans saw modest gains in employment and education after race-specific policies like affirmative action policies were implemented.
http://prospect.org/article/report-%E2%80%98racial-rules%E2%80%99-widen-economic-inequality-african-americans