Opinion
Bernanke ignores history of black and white wealth rift
7:50 AM on 10/30/2009
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke listens to businessmen following an address in Chatham, Mass., Friday, Oct. 23, 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Last spring when Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke visited Morehouse College, an undergraduate student asked him what accounts for the enormous racial disparity in wealth. Bernanke responded that the source of the problem was the lack of "financial literacy" and "financial education" on the part of blacks, particularly with respect to savings decisions.
He said nothing about the lack of access to inherited wealth, such as inheritances and other intergenerational transfers. Most wealth acquisition today takes place by such asset shifts. Even more astonishing, Bernanke never mentioned the notorious history of white violence that included the seizure, destruction and appropriation of black property.
Acknowledging this unfairness is not an excuse but a powerful truth; remedying it requires straightforward government action, rather than lectures on the value of saving. In fact, the racial wealth gap can be decreased - and without using a race-specific strategy of wealth redistribution.
We propose Children's Development Accounts, an expanded and non-incremental version of what Manning Marable of Columbia University has called the "Baby Bond" plan. It would provide an endowed trust fund for all children born into families with a net worth below the national median, progressively rising to $50,000 to $60,000 for children whose families are in the lowest wealth quartile. The program could be structured like the Earned Income Tax Credit, which uses a benefits phase-out schedule.
These individual trusts could grow in federally managed investment accounts and children could access the fund once they reach 18 years of age. The funds could be used only to finance a college education, a new home or a new business.
There are about 4 million babies born each year in the U.S. If the average trust is set at $20,000 per child and three-quarters of all newborns (3 million) are made eligible for the program, the baby bond program would cost about $60 billion per annum. Based on a crude estimate, the budget for the program would be less than 10 percent of the non-war spending budget for the Department of Defense. Although this simple estimate does not incorporate costs resulting from increased fertility incentives, it also does not incorporate savings resulting from reduction in other federal transfer programs associated with better-resourced young adults.
Bernanke expressed a perspective that locates the source of the black-white wealth gap in a fundamental deficiency in black behavior. The Bernanke perspective fits comfortably with the highly popular but incorrect view that in general, racial economic disparities in the U.S. are due to black ignorance or stupidity.
But the source of the black-white wealth gap has little, if anything, to do with bad financial judgments on the part of blacks. Savings behavior does not come close to explaining disparities this large. Arguably no one, regardless of race, creed or color, does much saving in America. Indeed, a number of studies over the past 40 years reveal that there is no difference between black and white household savings rates after controlling for income. Instead, the principal explanation for the enormous black-white wealth gap is the systemic denial of black households the capacity to accumulate wealth across generations.
Apart from the 250 years of slavery in which blacks themselves were both capital and financial assets for whites, and even upon emancipation, the national failure to endow black ex-slaves with the promised forty acres and a mule, blacks systematically have been denied the ability to accumulate property. Land acquired between 1880 and 1910 frequently was taken by government complicity, fraud and outright seizures by white terrorists. With the consolidation of the Jim Crow period, prosperous black communities and associated property were razed by white rioters in cities ranging from Wilmington, N.C., to Tulsa, Okla.
Restrictive covenants, redlining and general housing and lending discrimination also circumscribed black wealth accumulation. Today, as demonstrated by the ongoing evidence of predatory targeting of creditworthy black households and black neighborhoods for high-cost, subprime mortgage loans, blacks continue to face discrimination in credit markets.
Data from the 2002 Survey of Income and Program Participation shows the median white household has a net worth of $90,000. Latino households have a net worth of only $8,000, and black households have a net worth of a mere $6,000. More recent data from the 2007 Survey of Consumer Finances places median white household net worth at $170,400, median Latino net worth at $21,000, and median black net worth at $17,000.
A race-blind society that has not yet achieved race-fairness is a cruel society that locks in inequity. A race-fair society is one that breaks the link between race and advantage or disadvantage across generations. Public provision of a substantial trust fund for newborns from families that are wealth-poor would go a long way toward achieving that ideal.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
Top Stories
-
Reports: African-American homicide rates rising in Midwest states
theGRIO REPORT - Studies are revealing that more Midwest states have had significant increases in African-American homicide victims within the past few years...
more
- Happy birthday to the late, great, Bob Marley!
- Viola Davis stuns in LA Times mag photo spread
- Mary J. Blige on 'Wendy Williams': My marriage is 'not on the rocks'
- Jay-Z to launch 'From Marcy to Madison Square' Rocawear commercials
- The 10 best Super Bowl 2012 commercials
- Jamie Grace earns 1st Grammy nod, battles Tourette syndrome
- Obama, Romney look towards general election
- Oakland names first black woman to lead major US fire department
- Obama's grandma injured after car rolls in Kenya
- Hoekstra's broken English ad draws more criticism
- Obama regrets first lady being dragged into politics
- Obama leads Romney nationally in new Washington Post/ABC poll
- Amare Stoudemire's brother dies in Florida car crash
- Giants beat Patriots 21-17 to win the Super Bowl
- Obama won't be picking sides in Super Bowl
- The top 10 greatest black quarterbacks of all time (SLIDESHOW)
- 'Mean Joe Greene': Flashback to a Super Bowl ad classic (VIDEO)
- Super Bowl 2012: Will Chad Ochocinco have a chance to shine in the big game?
- Seattle woman awarded $975K in civil suit after giving birth in jail
- New inner-city health center opens in Boston
- Nick Cannon says he is completely healthy after illness
- Mississippi bill would force food stamp users to eat healthy
- Komen won't cut breast-screening grants to Planned Parenthood
- Tony Dorsett, Hall of Famer, suing NFL: 'They use you up'
- New survey finds: black women struggle to pay bills more than white women
- Slideshow: Mo' money, mo' problems! 20 celeb tax cheats
- 2/06/2012 - the Grio and CNBC Market Update
- Congress bans welfare recipients from using federal funds at strip clubs
- Birdman on sexual assault case: Cash Money was not involved
- Newt Gingrich: The poor 'need a trampoline' not a safety net
- The 10 most memorable presidential campaign themes (SLIDESHOW)
- Angelo Dundee dead: Legendary trainer for Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard dies at 90
- Black stars shine at 2012 SAG Awards (SLIDESHOW)
- 'Key & Peele' set to kick off: What are the best Obama parodies?
- Anthony Mackie in 'Man on a Ledge': Is he the next Denzel? (SLIDESHOW)
- Michael Jackson immortalized by his childen at Grauman's Chinese Theater (SLIDESHOW)
- Naketa Leiba: The search for missing Florida teen continues
- Eddie Long apologizes to Jewish community for 'crowning' ceremony
- Teen claims transvestite tricked him into thinking he was a woman
- TheGrio's 100: Chandra Gill, using her life experience to empower today's youth
- Clint Eastwood Chrysler Super Bowl ad appears pro-Obama
- New MLK assassination footage revealed in Smithsonian Channel doc
- Are black conservatives making a comeback?
- Chris Christie needs a history lesson on referendums and civil rights
- Black unemployment: What Washington can do now to address the high black jobless rate
- The trouble with Trump's Romney endorsement: It's the birtherism, stupid
- Eddie Long 'crowning': Why do black churches often put pastors on a pedestal?
- Why Jan Brewer's disrespect will motivate black voters for Obama
- 'The Obamas': Jodi Kantor White House book paints personal portrait of Barack and Michelle Obama
- San Diego African-American ministers sponsor gun exchange
- Rihanna and Mary J. Blige represent ends of R&B spectrum
- Why you can thank Drake now for 'Take Care'
- Does 'Tower Heist' steal black stars' dignity?
- Wale is winning on new 'Ambition' album
- Rev. Luter seeks to be first black man to lead Southern Baptist Convention
- Some blacks insist: 'I'm not African-American'
- Jhessye Shockley missing: Ariz. police begin searching landfill for girl
- Black drivers serve as decoys for US-Mexico human smugglers
- War vet denied benefits after being declared dead 4 times
- Brooklyn mom wins $13.5 million on lottery quick pick
- TheGrio Reflects: Malcolm X rails against complacent civil rights activists
- TheGrio Reflects: Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul
- TheGrio Reflects: Muhammad Ali on Vietnam
- theGrio Reflects: The Story Of Emmett Till
- theGrio Reflects: the Underground Railroad
- theGrio Reflects: The 14th Amendment is adopted
- Black men a 'distinct minority' at HBCUs
- Robert M. Franklin is stepping down as president of Morehouse College
- Bill Cosby on education reform: More funding is not the answer
- Can Obama really stop kids from dropping out of high school?
- Duke students call for better climate for blacks
- Number of blacks applying to medicals school rises by 4.8 percent
- Beautyshop Buzz: How will the debt debate end?
- Beautyshop Buzz: Is race a factor in the Casey Anthony case?
- Beautyshop Buzz: What does Father's day mean to you?
- Beautyshop Buzz: What's next for Oprah?
- Beautyshop Buzz: Does your mother determine who you date?
- Beautyshop Buzz: Will you go bald for good hair?
- Barbershop Buzz: Can Spike Lee make a comeback?
- Barbershop Buzz: Is social media taking over?
- Barbershop Buzz: How do you feel about legalizing gay marriage?
- Barbershop Buzz: Can LeBron silence his critics?
- Barbershop Buzz: Should we ban saggy pants?
- Barbershop Buzz: Will you support President Obama in 2012?
Monthly Archives
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- February 2009
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Myspace
Flickr
Foursquare
Wordpress
Linkedin
Last.fm
Tumblr
Identi.ca
Plurk