http://www.bankongreaterpittsburgh.com/many-african-americans-credit-invisible/
“I am invisible, understand,” Ralph Ellison famously wrote, “simply because people refuse to see me.”He was speaking of the double consciousness that accompanied the burden of blackness in America more than 60 years ago. But according to Yale professor Frederick Wherry, this conundrum is not just social and political but also economic—and that sense of invisibility persists in the 21st century.
It may come as no surprise that in the nation’s supposedly colorblind age, access to income, credit and financial solutions remains riddled with racial inequity – and those on the losing end are disproportionately African American.
According to the Policy Economic Research Council, approximately 54 million Americans are “credit invisibles” – which means that they engage in creditworthy activities, such as paying utility and phone bills on time, but are effectively invisible to credit agencies, which don’t take into account those kinds of payments when determining credit scores.
And the result has harsh real-world consequences.
Renting an apartment, qualifying for reasonably priced homeowners and car insurance, getting a job if you’re unemployed and securing a promotion if you’re already working are all things that can depend on your credit score.
An equally disadvantaged group is “unbanked” – the 8.2 percent of U.S. households that don’t have a checking or savings account and must rely on check cashers or prepaid cards, of the variety that are notoriously marketed in African-American and Hispanic communities. Another 20.1 percent are “underbanked”: households that have a bank account but are still forced to use high-interest, subprime financial services, such as payday loans, to make ends meet.
More than 55 percent of Black households are unbanked or underbanked, the highest of any racial or ethnic group, and this means that a majority of African-American families don’t have access to affordable financial solutions.
“I am invisible, understand,” Ralph Ellison famously wrote, “simply because people refuse to see me.”He was speaking of the double consciousness that accompanied the burden of blackness in America more than 60 years ago. But according to Yale professor Frederick Wherry, this conundrum is not just social and political but also economic—and that sense of invisibility persists in the 21st century.
It may come as no surprise that in the nation’s supposedly colorblind age, access to income, credit and financial solutions remains riddled with racial inequity – and those on the losing end are disproportionately African American.
According to the Policy Economic Research Council, approximately 54 million Americans are “credit invisibles” – which means that they engage in creditworthy activities, such as paying utility and phone bills on time, but are effectively invisible to credit agencies, which don’t take into account those kinds of payments when determining credit scores.
And the result has harsh real-world consequences.
Renting an apartment, qualifying for reasonably priced homeowners and car insurance, getting a job if you’re unemployed and securing a promotion if you’re already working are all things that can depend on your credit score.
An equally disadvantaged group is “unbanked” – the 8.2 percent of U.S. households that don’t have a checking or savings account and must rely on check cashers or prepaid cards, of the variety that are notoriously marketed in African-American and Hispanic communities. Another 20.1 percent are “underbanked”: households that have a bank account but are still forced to use high-interest, subprime financial services, such as payday loans, to make ends meet.
More than 55 percent of Black households are unbanked or underbanked, the highest of any racial or ethnic group, and this means that a majority of African-American families don’t have access to affordable financial solutions.