The Atlantic: Why Black Workers Really Do Need To Be Twice As Good

Arithmetic

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Black Workers Really Do Need to Be Twice as Good


African American employees tend to receive more scrutiny from their bosses than their white colleagues, meaning that small mistakes are more likely to be caught, which over time leads to worse performance reviews and lower wages.

For decades, black parents have told their children that in order to succeed despite racial discrimination, they need to be “twice as good”: twice as smart, twice as dependable, twice as talented. This advice can be found in everything from literature to television shows, to day-to-day conversation. Now, a new paperfrom the National Bureau of Economic Research shows that when it comes to getting and keeping jobs, that notion might be more than just a platitude.


There’s data that demonstrates the unfortunate reality: Black workers receive extra scrutiny from bosses, which can lead to worse performance reviews, lower wages, and even job loss. The NBER paper, authored by Costas Cavounidis and Kevin Lang, of Boston University, attempts to demonstrate how discrimination factors into company decisions, and creates a feedback loop, resulting in racial gaps in the labor force.

The researchers constructed an economic model based on labor market outcomes for unemployed workers. They build on existing data about job duration, unemployment duration, and lifetime earnings, and then simulate how companies determine whether or not new hires are a good fit.


They observe that the pool of unemployed black workers is likely to be seen as less skilled because of more consistent or prolonged unemployment. That can make companies less likely to hire them, and more skeptical once they do. This leads employers to invest more heavily in monitoring black employees. That could be everything from instructing supervisors to closely watch a new hire, or more directly monitoring job performance—for instance how many boxes a worker correctly packs at a shipping center. Because black workers are more closely scrutinized, it increases the chances that errors—large or small—will be caught. According to the researchers it’s more likely that a black employee would be let go for these errors than a white one. Thus another way of looking at the findings, Lang says, is that blacks simply don’t get a second chance.

Once fired, black workers return to the pool of unemployed—where they will once again have a difficult time finding work, prompting their next employer to be wary as well. In the meantime, white workers are less scrutinized, and as a result, they enjoy a longer tenure on the job, which leads to a stronger work history, more skills, and higher wages.


In order to keep a job, black workers also must meet a higher bar. Only in instances where black workers are monitored and displayed a significantly higher skill level than their white counterparts would they stand a significant chance of keeping their jobs for a while, the researchers found. But even in instances where the productivity of black workers far exceeded their white counterparts, there was still evidence that discrimination persisted, which could lead to lower wages or slower promotions.


This all may help explain the continuing gaps in labor market outcomes between black and white Americans. Historically, the unemployment rate of black Americans hovers about 2 percentage points higher than their white counterparts. Right now, the gap is much wider. At the close of the third quarter the unemployment rate for white Americans was 4.5 percent, below the national average of just over 5 percent. For blacks, however, unemployment was 9.4 percent. And that’s an improvement. Unemployment among black Americans only dipped below 10 percent at the start of 2015—more than five years into the economic recovery. The unemployment rate for whites never even topped 10 percent.

Unsurprisingly, all of these job switches mean that black workers can expect to make less over a lifetime than their white counterparts, which can exacerbate the income and wealth gaps between the races. “With a monitoring regime to look forward to at any future job, a black worker revealed to be in a good match could receive less than an unrevealed white worker,” the economists write.

The current system, in which black workers are disproportionately monitored and let go, while white workers are allowed longer stints, isn’t just bad for black people—it’s bad for the labor market overall. Such an arrangement is inefficient since a large pool of the unemployed drags on overall productivity and labor health, and since such bias doesn’t guarantee that the most productive person gets, and keeps, a job.
 

DrX

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My mom said the same thing and studies say she's right. Black people are monitored more closely at work so their superiors catch more errors and thus black people get axed more quickly.
thats we u gotta be an entrepreneur...i was a great worker and got treated like crap
 

audemarzz

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thats we u gotta be an entrepreneur...i was a great worker and got treated like crap

I understand this perfectly, they watch black workers like hawks and if they have a black person in a higher position they usually have that black person fuk with you on the job to make it more stressful, well least in my experience that's how it went.
 

CodeBlaMeVi

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Idk. It's a catch-22, cacs only try brehs that look like ducks. Most cacs are fraudulently friendly because I have a look like I won't put up with their shyt. However, that approach doesn't work with getting on in management and professional positions. Just my own observations. They say black but it's a black male issue.

I was thinking to myself earlier. Cacs really know how powerful we are but so many brehs don't realize it. Cacs put shyt in place to prevent an even playing field because they know we'll rise up and take over. Cacs are currently the majority but a breh can take out 3 cacs. They're frail, scared beings. I don't work twice as hard or none of that shyt. For what?

Brothers have to bite the bullet and pursue professions and skills where they have to break bread and deal with us. Like law and medicine (healthcare in general).

It's too few black lawyers so we'll get scooped up especially if we perform in law school. Too many cac lawyers. A doctor is a doctor no matter where you study. All this cute shyt like art and the like, cacs are not fighting for a breh or going to break bread. That's how the Asians and Indians play. They know what's up so why bother with anything else. That's my nickel.
 

Arithmetic

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Idk. It's a catch-22, cacs only try brehs that look like ducks. Most cacs are fraudulently friendly because I have a look like I won't put up with their shyt. However, that approach doesn't work with getting on in management and professional positions. Just my own observations. They say black but it's a black male issue.

I was thinking to myself earlier. Cacs really know how powerful we are but so many brehs don't realize it. Cacs put shyt in place to prevent an even playing field because they know we'll rise up and take over. Cacs are currently the majority but a breh can take out 3 cacs. They're frail, scared beings. I don't work twice as hard or none of that shyt. For what?

Brothers have to bite the bullet and pursue professions and skills where they have to break bread and deal with us. Like law and medicine (healthcare in general).

It's too few black lawyers so we'll get scooped up especially if we perform in law school. Too many cac lawyers. A doctor is a doctor no matter where you study. All this cute shyt like art and the like, cacs are not fighting for a breh or going to break bread. That's how the Asians and Indians play. They know what's up so why bother with anything else. That's my nickel.

Dap, rep, 5*. :youngsabo:
 
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Black people are monitored more closely at work so their superiors catch more errors and thus black people get axed more quickly.

This is called racial discrimination.......... not having to work twice as hard... Black woman aren't really having this issue so... :yeshrug.... ........ Not telling my seeds that.......
 

Queen

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Idk. It's a catch-22, cacs only try brehs that look like ducks. Most cacs are fraudulently friendly because I have a look like I won't put up with their shyt. However, that approach doesn't work with getting on in management and professional positions. Just my own observations. They say black but it's a black male issue.

I was thinking to myself earlier. Cacs really know how powerful we are but so many brehs don't realize it. Cacs put shyt in place to prevent an even playing field because they know we'll rise up and take over. Cacs are currently the majority but a breh can take out 3 cacs. They're frail, scared beings. I don't work twice as hard or none of that shyt. For what?

Brothers have to bite the bullet and pursue professions and skills where they have to break bread and deal with us. Like law and medicine (healthcare in general).

It's too few black lawyers so we'll get scooped up especially if we perform in law school. Too many cac lawyers. A doctor is a doctor no matter where you study. All this cute shyt like art and the like, cacs are not fighting for a breh or going to break bread. That's how the Asians and Indians play. They know what's up so why bother with anything else. That's my nickel.

That's inaccurate for two reasons. The first being that black women deal with the same perceptions and passive aggressive behavior that leads to a host of issues.

The second reason is that even if that wasn't the case, if something impacts either gender, it impacts us all. If black men have a hard time maintaining employment, that is an issue for black women and children. The same in reverse. I'm not sure why people on this board seem to want to divide issues based on gender when we are a nation that will either rise together or fall together.
 

Arithmetic

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That's inaccurate for two reasons. The first being that black women deal with the same perceptions and passive aggressive behavior that leads to a host of issues.

The second reason is that even if that wasn't the case, if something impacts either gender, it impacts us all. If black men have a hard time maintaining employment, that is an issue for black women and children. The same in reverse. I'm not sure why people on this board seem to want to divide issues based on gender when we are a nation that will either rise together or fall together.

It's not that this board wants to "divide issues based on gender". From my observation, black women are more likely to be treated like their white counterparts in the corporate world than black men.
 
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