African Americans underserved by U.S. banks: study
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[August 13, 2019]
By Imani Moise
(Reuters) - Many African Americans have
difficulty accumulating savings in part because they lack access to
mainstream financial services like banking, a new study on the
contributing factors to the U.S. racial wealth gap by McKinsey & Co
found on Tuesday.
Many minorities in the United States depend on more expensive financial
services like check-cashing counters since there are fewer banks in
non-white neighborhoods. Increasing access to basic banking services,
like checking and savings accounts, could save individual black
Americans up to $40,000 over their lifetime, the report found.
"Black families are being underserved and overcharged by institutions
that can provide the best channels for saving," said the report authored
by McKinsey partners Shelley Stewart and Jason Wright.
In majority-white counties, there are an average of 41 financial
institution for every 100,000 people compared with 27 in non-white
majority neighborhoods. However, more expensive services like pay-day
lending are more readily available in black neighborhoods, the report
said.
Further, banks in black neighborhoods typically require higher account
balances to avoid service fees. The average minimum balance in white
neighborhoods was $626, compared with $871 in black neighborhoods.
The racial wealth gap, or the difference between the average white and
black households' net worth, has expanded over the last two decades,
according to federal data. As of 2016, the wealth of the average white
family was 10 times higher than the average wealth of a black family.
The white household had a net worth of $171,000 while average black and
Hispanic households had a median net worth of $17,600 and $20,700
respectively.
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Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting
currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
McKinsey says closing the gap between black and white wealth in the
United States could increase GDP by up to 6% by 2028 through
increased investments and consumption.
The gap became a talking point on the campaign trail after
presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren published a plan to
close the gap by giving $7 billion to minority entrepreneurs and
expanding the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA).
Regulators including the Federal Reserve and the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency are considering overhauling the CRA, a
law passed as a follow-on to civil rights era laws meant to prevent
racial discrimination in lending, and to end practices like
“redlining” in which banks effectively refused to lend in certain
neighborhoods.
(Reporting by Imani Moise; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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