Reports
A look at major new studies
Why Didn’t Higher Education Protect Hispanic and Black Wealth?
Center for Household Financial Stability
at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, August 2015
William Emmons and Bryan Noeth
In the struggle against economic inequality, education has often been the first refuge of scoundrels. We don’t need to challenge inequitable distributions of income and wealth to help people get ahead, apologists for inequality assure us. We just need to help people get more education.
But more education — specifically, the earning of a college degree — hasn’t been helping black and Latino households outlast the recessions of recent years.
Indeed, report Fed Reserve Bank of St. Louis researchers William Emmons and Bryan Noeth, the median net worth of black Americans with a college education since 1992 has dropped by substantially more than the median net worth of black households without a college degree.
By contrast, the net worths of white households with college degrees have increased since 1992, while the net worths of white households without college degrees have fallen.
What explains this stark contrast? Debt.
Minority households with college educations had to borrow heavily to achieve middle class status before the Great Recession hit in 2008. They had to borrow heavily because their parents and grandparents had precious little wealth to share with them — to help pay college tuition, for instance, or put down a bigger downpayment on a home.
Prior family wealth, in America today, still powerfully shapes future family wealth. |
And these older minority generations had little wealth, in turn, because public policies on everything from housing to banking, combined with widespread employment discrimination, had made accumulating wealth oppressively difficult for most minority households.
Against that history, suggests the new Emmons and Noeth St. Louis Fed study, “higher education cannot level the playing field.”
Adds one analyst of the study, Duke Consortium on Social Equity’s William Darity: “Prior family wealth shapes both income-generating opportunities and the capacity to allow wealth to grow more wealth.”
The Color of Money
Every Voice Center, August 2015
Tam Doan
America’s political system, notes former President Jimmy Carter, has become an “oligarchy” with “unlimited political bribery.” And the super rich making those bribes live in a remarkably small number of neighborhoods, finds a new report from the Washington, D.C.-based Every Voice Center.
Half the $74 million in large individual donations to the 10 presidential candidates so far leading the 2016 money race have come from just 1 percent of U.S. zip codes. Big donors from the six poshest zip codes of Manhattan gave more to these 10 presidential candidates than all 1,200 majority African-American zip codes in the entire United States. |