Forget the hoopla and ballyhoo
celebrating Black faces in high places. The median net worth of an
African American household is about $6,000, while white households
wield 14 times as much wealth: more than $88,000. The disastrous details
are contained in a report on wealth disparities by the Pew
Hispanic Center, “The Wealth of Hispanic Households: 1996 to 2002,” but the
worst news is for Blacks, one-third of whom have no assets or a negative
net worth.
The bottom fell out of Black wealth accumulation in the deep recession
of 2000 – 2001, a downturn that hurt all ethnic groups, but from
which whites and Hispanics rapidly rebounded. Whites recouped their
losses from the recession and fattened their holdings by 17 percent
between 1996 and 2002. Hispanics boosted their meager household wealth
to about $7,900 during that period – still only one eleventh of white
households, but almost fully recovering the 27 percent loss they
suffered at the turn of the 21st century. Blacks also
lost 27 percent of their net worth in 2000 – 2001, but got back only
5 percent in 2002. These African American losses appear near-permanent,
the result of the deindustrialization of the United States – the
destruction of the Black blue-collar workforce.
Hispanics, clustered in the low wage service sector, suffered less
lasting effects. However, for African Americans, the worst news just
keeps on coming, the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow discrimination.
As Roderick Harrison, a researcher at the Joint Center for Political
and Economic Studies, told the Associated
Press: "Wealth
is a measure of cumulative advantage or disadvantage. The fact that
black and Hispanic wealth is a fraction of white wealth also reflects
a history of discrimination."
It is a “reflection” in the American mirror that whites don’t want
to see, believing in the vast majority that their privilege and wealth
has been earned – and at no one else’s expense. In truth, as Harvard
social demographer Dr. Michael A. Dawson puts it, “The racial structures
in the United States continue to this day to produce wealth disparities.” Today,
these structures are working feverishly to dislodge Blacks from their
precarious perches in the middle class. Yet whites remain implacably
opposed to engaging in even a discussion of reparations, while continuing
to profit from “the inherited gift
that keeps on giving” (see , May
8, 2002). Surfing
through the recession with their assets largely intact, white America
pretends that some malady of “culture” – rather than the crimes of
a nation – is what holds African Americans back. And some Black fools
believe them.
Tomfoolery in high places
“There were several members of the Congressional Black Caucus who
took the position that the racial wealth disparity was due to the
misbehavior of Black folks,” says Dr. William “Sandy” Darity, recalling
events at the 2003 Black Caucus Week, in Washington. Several silly
Black lawmakers theorized that wealth disparities could be eliminated
if only African Americans would engage in less impulse buying and
save more money, said Darity, a Professor of Public Policy Studies,
African and African American Studies and Economics at Duke University.
He continued: “In fact, if you control for income, the Black savings
rate is at least as high as the white savings rate. There is some
evidence to suggest that it might be higher.”
By Darity’s calculations, African Americans would have to go without
food, shelter, clothing and all other expenses en masse “for
well over a decade” to save enough to achieve wealth parity with
whites. “So I would say, there is no way that you can catch up by
systemic and careful savings. If African Americans saved all of their
income – that is, if we didn’t eat, pay any bills, but saved every
cent of income – we could not close the wealth gap,” said the professor,
who also teaches economics at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill.
In economics, the past is present; it is the cushion on which
some folks arrive in this world. In the United States, those white
cushions were likely embroidered by no- and low-wage Black folks
whose descendants are today being slammed to the pavement with no
buffer of any kind.
African American households earn less than 60 percent of median
white income. At the pace of catch-up since 1968, according to a
report issued earlier this year by United for a Fair Economy
(UFE), “it would take 581 years” to achieve income parity with whites.
But wages are not wealth. For most Americans, home ownership is the
major asset. Seventy-five percent of whites own their homes, while
more than half of Blacks rent. At the rate of “progress” recorded
since 1970, UFE estimates “it would take 1,664 years to close the
ownership gap – 55 generations.”
The roots of this unbridgeable gap – unbridgeable, that is, by the
conventional mechanisms of capitalism – are much nearer. Duke University’s
Dr. Darity follows the path the mule never took to examine the value
of the 40 acres most ex-slaves never got. “We were supposed to get
40 million acres, we managed to accumulate 15 million by dint of
our own efforts, and now we’re down to about one million acres,” said
the professor. “I think people tend to deemphasize the importance
of land as wealth. The areas designated by Union General William
Sherman’s [1865] field
order are now some of the most valuable
land in American.” He is referring to the coastal regions of South
Carolina and Georgia, now home and playground of the rich.
Of the 15 million acres of land accumulated by Blacks throughout
the South in the aftermath of the Civil War, most “was fairly systematically
taken away through terror, taxes and fraud. There were instances
of the wholesale destruction of Black deeds by arson,” said Darity.
The African American real estate patrimony was all but wiped out
through white private and public lawlessness – crimes that led directly
to today’s racial wealth disparities.
Had the post-Civil War federal government honored and expanded upon
Gen. Sherman’s 1865 promise, or passed Congressman Thaddeus Stevens’ 1867
Reparations
Bill for the African Slaves in the United States,
which would have allotted 40 acres “to each [formerly enslaved] male
person who is the head of a family,” African Americans might actually
have gotten an economic leg up on the waves of European immigrants
that poured into the country during the latter decades of the 1800s.
Trillions lost
What would an 1865 plot of 40 acres be worth to Black America today?
According to economist Darity’s numbers, about $1.6 million dollars
to every African American – not counting the mule. “That should be
the anchor for reparations,” he said.
And what of free and devalued Black labor? In a 2000 paper, Professor Joe
R. Feagin, of the University of Florida, at Gainesville, reviewed
a number of labor reparations calculations. He concluded:
”Clearly, the sum total of the worth of all the
black labor stolen by whites through the means of slavery, segregation,
and contemporary discrimination is staggering – many trillions of
dollars. The worth of all that labor, taking into account
lost interest over time and putting it in today's dollars, is perhaps
in the range of $5 to $24 trillion.”
Feagin also tackled the land issue, to demonstrate that historical
federal largess to whites dwarfs current Black reparations claims:
”Passed under the Abraham Lincoln administration,
the Homestead Act provided access to productive land and wealth,
mostly for white families, from the 1860s to the 1930s. Some 246
million acres were provided by the federal government, at minimal
cost, for some 1.5 homesteads. Research by Trina Williams…estimates
that – depending on calculations of multiple ownership, mortality,
marriage, and childbearing patterns – somewhere between 20 and 93
million Americans are now the beneficiaries of this large wealth-generating
program over several generations. Williams (2000) suggests that the
most likely figure is in the middle range, perhaps 46 million, a
figure equal to about one quarter of the current population. Almost
all of these beneficiaries have been white, as only 4,000 African
Americans made entries under the Homestead Act.”
Thus, white folks, many of them immigrants, received multiples of
the acreage promised to Blacks – 246 million vs. 40 million – yet
their descendants laugh out loud when African Americans bring up “40
acres and a mule.”
Not one cash dollar
Reparations supporters may tally the bill by any number of formulas,
but white America isn’t hearing any of it. Data from a study of racial divisions under the George W. Bush administration, conducted
over the past four years by Harvard University Professors Michael
C. Dawson and Lawrence Bobo, reveal no support among whites for cash
payments to compensate Blacks for slavery and Jim Crow. “None, no
support, not any,” Dawson emphasized. “It’s a different world, in
terms of how different groups see reality. There’s also a different
moral universe.”
Within that morally challenged universe, only 4 percent of whites
favored reparations for Black slavery in surveys conducted in 2000
and 2003. Two-thirds of Black respondents favored reparations for
slavery.
This year, Dawson and Bobo, both professors of African and African
American Studies, sought to clarify Black and white attitudes toward
three reparations proposals: cash payments to African Americans as
individuals; scholarship funds for disadvantaged African American
youth; or the establishment of a Community Trust, to be used to rebuild
Black schools and community infrastructure and foster small business.
Whites unanimously rejected the idea of cash payments to Blacks.
When asked to assume that reparations were necessary, and to choose
some form of compensation, whites favored a Community Trust over
scholarships. African Americans favor both cash payments and the
Community Trust idea, but are more likely to support the Community
Trust framework. All three proposals enjoy some degree of support
among African Americans.
A question from the Dawson-Bobo 2003 survey may provide the best
measure of general white moral obtuseness on issues of race. When
asked if reparations should be paid to the survivors of the white
destruction of the Black communities of Tulsa,
Oklahoma (1921) and Rosewood, Florida (1923), 84 percent of
Blacks said “yes.” Only
11 percent of whites agreed, an indication that widespread white
feelings of guilt over racial oppression is a myth.
Professor Dawson noted that “even when presented with a demonstrable
survivor of a contemporary event, whites oppose any reparations to
the Black victims.”
That’s because most whites consider themselves to be, somehow,
victims of African Americans, just as they feel set upon and victimized
for no good reason by dark Islamic forces in the world, and for the
same reasons that they constructed a national mythology of victimization
at the hands of “savage” Indians. The Dawson-Bobo statistics tell
a tale of racism in the raw.
So deep is the collective psychosis, that the current and historical
reality of enforced Black economic instability, as detailed in the
Pew wealth disparity study, seems to affirm many whites in their
delusions of superiority. Against all facts and reason, white America
rejects redress of Black grievances, because it refuses to recognize
its own bloody legacy, as described by University of Florida Professor
Joe Feagin:
”White privilege is ubiquitous and imbedded even
where most whites cannot see it; it is the foundation of this society.
It began in early white gains from slavery and has persisted under
legal segregation and contemporary racism. Acceptance of this system
of white privileges and black disadvantages as ‘normal’ has conferred
advantages for whites now across some fifteen generations.”
There will be a reckoning.
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