The Cities Where African-Americans Are Doing The Best Economically 2018

AB Ziggy

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The Cities Where African-Americans Are Doing The Best Economically 2018

The 2007 housing crisis was particularly tough on African-Americans, as well as Hispanics, extinguishing much of their already miniscule wealth. Industrial layoffs, particularly in the Midwest, made things worse.

However the rising economic tide of the past few years has started to lift more boats. The African-American unemployment rate fell to 6.8% in December, the lowest level since the government started keeping tabs in 1972. Although that’s 3.1 percentage points worse than whites, the gap is the slimmest on record. A tightening labor market since 2015 has also driven up wages of black workers, many of whom are employed in manufacturing and other historically middle and lower-wage service industries.

There's still much room for economic improvement for the nation's black community -- the income gap with whites remains considerably higher than it was in 2000, with the median black household earning 35.5% less -- but as we pay homage to Martin Luther King this week, the record low unemployment rate is a cause for celebration.

President Trump has predictably taken credit for the good news, but kudos more likely should go to those states and metropolitan areas that have created the conditions for black progress.

The gains have not been evenly spread. To determine where African-Americans are faring the best economically, we evaluated America’s 53 largest metropolitan statistical areas based on three critical factors that we believe are indicators of middle-class success: the home ownership rate as of 2016; entrepreneurship, as measured by the self-employment rate in 2017; and 2016 median household income. In addition, we added a fourth category, demographic trends, measuring the change in the African-American population from 2010 to 2016 in these metro areas, to judge how the community is “voting with its feet.” Each factor was given equal weight.

The South Also Rises

One of the great ironies of our time is that the best opportunities for African-Americans now lie in the South, from which so many fled throughout much of the 20th century. In the past few decades, many good jobs have moved South and blacks, like many whites and Hispanics, have followed.

The South dominated the previous version of this ranking, developed through the Center for Opportunity Urbanism, three years ago, and still does. All of the top 10 metro areas are in the South, led in a tie for the No. 1 spot by Washington, DC-VA-MD-WV and Atlanta, which was our previous leader.

Washington, with its ample supply of well-paid federal jobs, is the metro area where blacks have the highest median household income in the nation: $69,246. Amid rising home prices, the black home ownership rate has dipped to 48.3% from 49.2%, but that’s still fourth highest among the largest metro areas.

Atlanta, with its historically black universities and strong middle class, has long been described as the black capital of America, and its thriving entertainment scene has given rise to claims that it’s become a cultural capital as well. Entrepreneurship is strong, with some 20% of the metro area’s black working population self-employed, the highest proportion in the nation, and though median black household income is quite a bit lower than in the D.C. area at $48,161, costs are lower too. In-migration has slowed since the financial crisis, but the black population is still up 14.7% since 2010.

Atlanta and Washington are followed in our ranking by Austin, Texas, Baltimore and Raleigh, N.C., with the rest of the top 20 rounded out exclusively by Southern cities, except for Boston in 19th place.

Two key determinants seem to be driving these rankings: homeownership and self-employment, traditional benchmarks of entering the middle class. All of the top 10 boast homeownership rates that match or well exceed the black national average of 41 percent. (It should be noted that the national average is a full third lower than the national average for all ethnicities.)

These patterns hold up as well for income. Black incomes have been rising most rapidly since 2010 in largely fast-growing Sun Belt locales, as analyst and Forbes contributor Pete Saunders has found, such as Nashville, Raleigh and Austin. It appears as if the fastest income gains are generally being made in the places where other ethnic groups are advancing as well. After Washington, the metro areas where blacks have the highest annual household incomes are San Jose ($65,400), the capital of Silicon Valley, and No. 4 Baltimore ($53,200), which like Washington has a huge federal employment base.

The New Great Migration

Perhaps the most persuasive indicator of African-American trends lies in population growth. During the period of the Great Migration out of the south in the early 20th century, an estimated 6 million blacks headed north and west to cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and St. Louis. But now the tide is reversing, with the African-American population dropping in the latter three over the past six years, as well as in San Francisco and cities with fading industrial cores like Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Detroit and Milwaukee.

In contrast the metro areas whose African-American populations have expanded the most since 2010 are the South and Sun Belt: Las Vegas, Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, Phoenix.

In some cases it’s clear that blacks are leaving for better economic opportunities. In others, high housing prices may play a role: In Los Angeles and San Francisco the black homeownership rate is about 9 percentage points lower than the major metro average.

In San Francisco the black community seems headed toward irrelevance and extinction as tech workers have driven up home prices to unprecedented levels; the metropolitan area's African-American population has dropped 6.3% from 2010.

The situation is particularly dire in California where strict land-use and housing regulations have been associated with increases in home prices relative to income of 3.5 times the rest of the nation since 1995. In coastal California, African-Americans face prices from more than two to nine times their annual incomes than non-Hispanic whites. African-American homeownership rates in California are down 17% in the Golden State compared to a decline of 11% for Hispanics and 6% for non-Hispanic whites. Asian homeownership rates have stayed the same.
 

ignorethis

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Damn, Dallas and Austin made the list but not Houston?

Wtf going on...

EDIT: Houston at 8 right behind San Antonio, Dallas ain't make top 10. Overall Texas looking good, but I'm kinda iffy about Austin being that high, never heard much about the black population in Austin.
 
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Chrishaune

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I bet Austin and Nashville both have bad ass women. The night life in those cities must be surreal.


Yeah:mjpls:




Just kidding, Austin would probably be my choice before Nashville though. Not far from Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio. Great barbecue and Mexican food. I've worked in Nashville for the past 6 months. It's cool, but also country music's mecca...
 

BigMan

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If we are just bringing up city limits, blacks make up more of the Boston population more than Houston. Those schools in Boston are teaching our brehs good
what does that have to do with how blacks are doing economically? there are no black middle or upper class neighborhoods in the city of Boston
https://www.theroot.com/the-median-net-worth-of-black-bostonians-is-lower-than-1821214855
Citing a study from 2015, “The Color of Wealth,” the Boston Globe listed the median wealth of a series of Bostonians based on their racial and ethnic backgrounds. The median net worth for white households in Boston, for example, was $247,500. For Caribbean-born black people, it was $12,000.

But for blacks native to the U.S., the median net worth of an entire household was just $8.
Some readers thought it was a typo, prompting the Globe to publish another article explaining that it wasn’t.

Put another way, that means the median white household in Boston is worth nearly 31,000 times more than a black American household.

Net worth was even lower for Dominicans living in the Boston area. The median net worth of their households was $0.
Boston. Racism. Image. Reality: The Spotlight Team takes on our hardest question
boston_small.jpg

At least 15 percent of the residents are black; and among the black residents, at least 30 percent had a four-year college degree and their household income was at or above the median for their metro area. (That is about $75,000 in Greater Boston.)

follow that link and you can compare that to other metros
 
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AB Ziggy

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ain't no way Boston should be anywhere near this type of list

Would not go anywhere near there either. Went to a summer research presentation up there junior year an everybody would stop talking to you off if they find you didn't graduate from certain schools or don't have certain jobs(this city pleases HEAVY prestige on scientists and academia) below a certain income :mjpls:. And very segregated.

Basically the New England version of the DMV :snoop:
 

BigMan

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Would not go anywhere near there either. Went to a summer research presentation up there junior year an everybody would stop talking to you off if they find you didn't graduate from certain schools or don't have certain jobs(this city pleases HEAVY prestige on scientists and academia) below a certain income :mjpls:. And very segregated.

Basically the New England version of the DMV :snoop:
the boston area is nothing like the DC area
 

J_rock

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I bet Austin and Nashville both have bad ass women. The night life in those cities must be surreal.


:mjlol:


You must've never visited Austin. The nightlife is made for cacs by cacs. City as a whole is boring as fukk if you're not white. And the only dating/fukking options are Beckys cause of UT/TX State/St. Edwards, etc. But maybe that's your thing... :mjpls:


Most black people (young ones especially) hate living there... But it's got some good state jobs and the tech scene is booming. Lots of good, high paying jobs with a relatively low cost of living compared to the East and West coast.

The blacks willing to tough out the atrocious cultural/lifestyle scene can do pretty well financially if they want to :manny:
 
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