For U.S. blacks, Latinos, no sign of a broadly rising tide
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[June 15, 2020]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The protests sparked
by the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police have opened a
broader discussion about racial inequality in the United States.
The U.S. civil rights movement in the 1960s was a watershed when it came
to formal de-segregation in housing, education, the workplace and public
spaces. But more than a half century later, stark divisions remain in
how the benefits of a $20 trillion economy are distributed among the
largest racial and ethnic minorities and the country's white majority.
An array of government programs has attempted to address the issue,
including anti-poverty efforts, affirmative action to boost college
enrollment, and preferences in contracting for minority-owned
businesses.
But black and Latino families on average continue to earn less, have
higher unemployment, and are harder hit when economic shocks like the
coronavirus hit.
"The downturn has not fallen equally on all Americans, and those least
able to shoulder the burden have been the most affected," Federal
Reserve chair Jerome Powell said this week.
That gap is most apparent in family net worth estimates. Black and
Hispanic families accumulate proportionately less in real estate,
stocks, business assets and other forms of wealth than white families.
Over time, that creates lower inheritances for children and more
constraints when it comes to funding education or training - a dynamic
that can help perpetuate the problem.
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Some Fed officials have pointed to deep-seated racism as drag on the
U.S. economy.
"By limiting economic and educational opportunities for a large
number of Americans, institutionalized racism constrains this
country's economic potential," Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic
said on Friday, calling for an end to racism as both a moral and
economic imperative.
"The economic contributions of these Americans, in the form of work
product and innovation, will be less than they otherwise could have
been. Systemic racism is a yoke that drags on the American economy."
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The lack of progress after so many decades has led some to argue
that a massive generational transfer, sometimes referred to as
reparations, is needed to undo a legacy that has roots in slavery,
but continued to compound through the era of formal segregation and
beyond.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Heather Timmons and Sam
Holmes)
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