Wealth and Worth: What’s race got to do with it?
A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to attend a conference hosted by the Ford Foundation and Howard University’s Center on Race and Wealth. The three-day meeting was the first annual gathering of a diverse group of representatives supported by grants from the Ford Foundation’s Building Economic Security Over a Lifetime initiative. The initiative promotes programs that help low-income families achieve and maintain economic stability throughout their lives. The conference focused on a particular and troubling aspect of economic achievement in the United States: the racial wealth gap.
Few ideas are more evocative of the American dream than wealth and economic security, yet opportunities to accumulate wealth and secure income have never been equally distributed. In virtually every measure of wealth, non-white households are falling behind. For example, homeownership, the primary vehicle for building wealth for most Americans, is more attainable for white households than their minority counterparts. According to the U.S. Census, in 2008 only 47.5% of African-Americans and 48.9% of Hispanics owned their own homes, compared with 74.9% of whites. White households continue to accumulate more savings, more assets (vehicles, houses, businesses), and more wealth, consistently maintaining larger net worths than minority households. While some of this gap is attributable to higher incomes and educational attainment, it takes a longer view of history to understand and explain its persistence. Historically, some of the largest expansions of American wealth were achieved through sacrifices disproportionately shouldered by the poor, the disenfranchised, and communities of color. Read the rest of this entry »


