If you're a Black boy raised in these United States, Even if you are fortunate and blessed enough to be raised in the
wealthiest families and living in some of the most well-to-do
neighborhoods,Chances are you'll still earn less in adulthood than white boys with similar
backgrounds, according to a sweeping new study that traced the lives of
millions of children.
White boys who grow up rich are likely to remain
that way. Black boys raised at the top, however, are more likely to
become poor than to stay wealthy in their own adult households.
The question is...Why is this?
Even when children grow up next to each other
with parents who earn similar incomes, black boys fare worse than white
boys in 99 percent of America. And the gaps only worsen in the kind of
neighborhoods that promise low poverty and good schools.
According to the study, led by researchers at
Stanford, Harvard and the Census Bureau, income inequality between
blacks and whites is driven entirely by what is happening among these boys
and the men they become.
Though black girls and women face deep
inequality on many measures, black and white girls from families with
comparable earnings attain similar individual incomes as adults.
Again why is this? What is happening here?
“You would have thought at some point you escape
the poverty trap,” said Nathaniel Hendren, a Harvard economist and an
author of the study.
Black boys — even rich black boys — can seemingly never assume that.
The study,
based on anonymous earnings and demographic data for virtually all
Americans now in their late 30s, debunks a number of other widely held
hypotheses about income inequality. Gaps persisted even when black and
white boys grew up in families with the same income, similar family
structures, similar education levels and even similar levels of
accumulated wealth.
The disparities that remain also can’t be
explained by differences in cognitive ability, an argument made by
people who cite racial gaps in test scores that appear for both black
boys and girls. If such inherent differences existed by race, “you’ve
got to explain to me why these putative ability differences aren’t
handicapping women,” said David Grusky, a Stanford sociologist who has
reviewed the research.
A more likely possibility, the authors suggest,
is that test scores don’t accurately measure the abilities of black
children in the first place.
If this inequality can’t be explained by
individual or household traits, much of what matters probably lies
outside the home — in surrounding neighborhoods, in the economy and in a
society that views black boys differently from white boys, and even
from black girls.
“One of the most popular liberal post-racial
ideas is the idea that the fundamental problem is class and not race,
and clearly this study explodes that idea,” said Ibram Kendi, a
professor and director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at
American University. “But for whatever reason, we’re unwilling to stare
racism in the face.”
The authors, including the Stanford economist
Raj Chetty and two census researchers, Maggie R. Jones and Sonya R.
Porter, tried to identify neighborhoods where poor black boys do well,
and as well as whites.
“The problem,” Mr. Chetty said, “is that there are essentially no such neighborhoods in America.”
That is a pathbreaking
finding,” said William Julius Wilson, a Harvard sociologist whose books
have chronicled the economic struggles of black men. “They’re not
talking about the direct effects of a boy’s own parents’ marital status.
They’re talking about the presence of fathers in a given census tract.”
Other fathers in the community can provide boys
with role models and mentors, researchers say, and their presence may
indicate other neighborhood factors that benefit families, like lower
incarceration rates and better job opportunities.
“This crystallizes and puts data behind this
thing that we always knew was there because we either felt it ourselves
or we’ve seen it over time,” said Will Jawando, 35, who worked in the
Obama White House on My Brother’s Keeper,
a mentoring initiative for black boys. Even without this data, the
people who worked on that project, he said, believed that individual and
structural racism targeted black men in ways that required policies
devised specifically for them.
Mr. Jawando, the son of a Nigerian father and a
white mother, grew up poor in Silver Spring, Md. The Washington suburb
contains some of the rare neighborhoods where black and white boys
appear to do equally well. Mr. Jawando, who identifies as black, is now a
married lawyer with three daughters. He is among the black boys who
climbed from the bottom to the top.
He was one of the 20 million children born
between 1978 and 1983 whose lives are reflected in the study. Using
census data that included tax files, the researchers were able to link
the adult fortunes of those children to their parents’ incomes. Names
and addresses were hidden from the researchers.
Previous research suggests some reasons there
may be a large income gap between black and white men, but not between
women, even though women of color face both sexism and racism.
As early as preschool, they are more likely to be
disciplined in school. They are pulled over or detained and searched by police officers more often.
“It’s not just being black but being male that has been hyper-stereotyped in this negative way, in which we’ve made black men scary, intimidating,
with a propensity toward violence,” said Noelle Hurd, a psychology
professor at the University of Virginia.
She said this racist stereotype particularly
hurts black men economically, now that service-sector jobs, requiring
interaction with customers, have replaced the manufacturing jobs that
previously employed men with less education.
The new data shows that 21 percent of black men
raised at the very bottom were incarcerated, according to a snapshot of a
single day during the 2010 census. Black men raised in the top 1
percent — by millionaires — were as likely to be incarcerated as white
men raised in households earning about $36,000.
At the same time, boys benefit more than girls from adult attention and resources, as do low-income and nonwhite children, a variety of studies
have found. Mentors who aren’t children’s parents, but who share those
children’s gender and race, serve a particularly important role for
black children, Ms. Hurd has found.
That helps explain why the presence of black fathers in a neighborhood,
even if not in a child’s home, appears to make a difference.
“Simply because you’re in an area that is more
affluent, it’s still hard for black boys to present themselves as
independent from the stereotype of black criminality,” said Khiara
Bridges, a professor of law and anthropology at Boston University who
has written a coming paper on discrimination against affluent black
people.
“I think if I’m putting on a sweatsuit, if I go
somewhere, will I be seen as just kind of a hood black guy?” he said.
“Or will people recognize me at all?” Those small daily decisions — to
wear a blazer or not — follow him despite his success. “I don’t think
you escape those things,” he said.
No, You don't!
There is a study that makes it possible to look in greater detail at interrelated disparities
that researchers have long studied around income, marriage rates and
incarceration. Here are some of the other findings.
There’s a large gap in the marriage rates of white and black Americans, even after accounting for income.
One reason income gaps between whites and blacks
appear so large at the household level is that black men and women are
less likely to be married. That means their households are more likely
to have a single income — not two.
For this reason and others, many
point to differences in family structure as a primary driver of racial
income inequality. If black children don’t have married parents, the
argument goes, they’re more likely to grow up with fewer resources and
less adult attention at home.
This study found, however, that broad income
disparities still exist between black and white men even when they’re
raised in homes with the same incomes and the same family structure.
2 comments:
Damnnn This was long, but very informative!
As usual, informative and on point!
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