Five Bleak Facts on Black Opportunity

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Was just doing some reading on black upward mobility and came across this study from the Brookings Institution.

It's not exactly groundbreaking stuff, and the content is fairly well known by anyone who has read sociology before, but its an unbiased study and the author doesn't shy away from putting things in the context of structural racism inherent in American society.

What would Martin Luther King Jr. think of America in 2015 if he’d lived to see his eighty-sixth birthday? No doubt, he’d be pleased by the legal and political advances of black Americans, crowned by the election and re-election of President Obama.

But King would be disturbed by the stubborn race gaps that remain, especially in opportunity, tarnishing the idea of the American Dream. In terms of opportunity, there are still two Americas, divided by race. Five facts show how far we still have to go.

1.Half of Black Americans Born Poor Stay Poor

Upward mobility from the bottom of the income distribution is much less likely for black than white Americans: 51% of the black Americans born into the lowest fifth of the earnings distribution remain there at age 40:

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2.Most Black Middle Class Kids Are Downwardly Mobile

Downward intergenerational social mobility from the middle to the bottom is much more common among Black Americans. Seven out of ten black Americans born into the middle quintile fall into one of the two quintiles below as adults. In some ways, this is an even more depressing fact than the poor rates of upward mobility. Even black Americans who make it to the middle class are likely to see their kids fall down the ladder:

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3.Black Wealth Barely Exists

Race gaps in wealth – already wide - widened further during the Great Recession. The median wealth of white households is now 13 times greater than for black households --the largest gap in a quarter century, according to analysis by the Pew Research Center. Black median wealth almost halved during the recession, falling from $19,200 in 2007 to $11,000 in 2013:

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4.Most Black Families Headed by Single Parent

Black children are much more likely to be raised in a single-parent household, and as our own research suggests, family structure can play a large role in a child’s chance of success in all stages of life:

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5.Black Students Attend Worse Schools

The school system remains highly segregated by race and economic status: black students make up 16 percent of the public school population, but the average black student attends a school that’s 50 percent black. Our colleague Jonathan Rothwell shows that the average black student also attends a school at the 37th percentile for test score results whereas the average white student attends a school in the 60th percentile:


There are race gaps in almost every conceivable social and economic dimension, many of which we have discussed on these pages before: incarceration, early learning, parenting,schooling, attitudinal racism, employment - the list goes on. There has been progress, too, of course. But one thing is clear. An inescapable requirement for building an opportunity society is improving the life chances of black Americans.

Five Bleak Facts on Black Opportunity
 

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Was just doing some reading on black upward mobility and came across this study from the Brookings Institution.

It's not exactly groundbreaking stuff, and the content is fairly well known by anyone who has read sociology before, but its an unbiased study and the author doesn't shy away from putting things in the context of structural racism inherent in American society.



Five Bleak Facts on Black Opportunity
Family structure is the most important.
 

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Ok...so how do we fix it?

The article just addresses the obvious. It would help to know the root causes of each of these points, and from there we can be able to devise solutions towards fixing them.

Why for instance are black households more likely to be single parent than any other race? Incarceration rates? Promiscuity? You have to understand the root causes for the problems before you can begin to address them.
 

hashmander

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damn, that downward mobility one is depressing. something must be rotten in the culture if middle class kids aren't building on the small gains their parents worked so hard to achieve. other minority groups are building on the previous generation and we're falling behind our parents. :snoop: unless your parents are rich or even upper middle class, you should be doing better than them. that's the point of this, give our children a better life so that they can have advantages we didn't and build on that. maybe they find something appealing in the culture of poverty that they want a piece of that :martin:
 

MeachTheMonster

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damn, that downward mobility one is depressing. something must be rotten in the culture if middle class kids aren't building on the small gains their parents worked so hard to achieve. other minority groups are building on the previous generation and we're falling behind our parents. :snoop: unless your parents are rich or even upper middle class, you should be doing better than them. that's the point of this, give our children a better life so that they can have advantages we didn't and build on that. maybe they find something appealing in the culture of poverty that they want a piece of that :martin:
Has nothing to do with culture.

The American economy has been squeezing the middle class for the last 30 years across the board. Obviously black people will feel it the worst seeing how we have less to fall back on
 
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