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By Marc H. Morial | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - I have said it before and I will
say it again: Economic empowerment is the civil rights struggle
of the 21st Century.
The civil rights movement of the 1960s helped the African
American community take great strides in terms of political
and social empowerment. Doors long closed to people of color
were pried open with the enactment of civil rights legislation,
affirmative action and other reforms designed to give them
a voice on Capitol Hill, in academia and corporate America.
But two recent studies by major thought leaders in Washington,
D.C. reveal that more than 40 years later minorities in the
United States still face major challenges in achieving economic
parity with their white counterparts and realizing the American
Dream.
The Economic Mobility Project, a research collaboration
of major beltway think tanks - The Heritage Foundation, American
Enterprise Institute, Brookings Institution and Urban Institute,
recently found that the income gap between Black and White
households has actually expanded since the early 1970s.
Black families in 2004 earned 58 percent of what White households
did, down from 63 percent in 1974. This jibes well with the
National Urban League’s equality index, which found
that Blacks had 57 percent of the economic status of Whites.
Household income, when adjusted for inflation, has actually
risen as a result of more women entering the workforce. But
the project’s recent report, based on a survey of 2,300
families over the past 30 years, found that White households
benefited most from the shift, mainly those of white women
whose incomes rose 500 percent over the period while those
of White men stagnated. Among Black men, income has actually
fallen since 1974, offset by gains among Black women.
Comparing the incomes of parents in the late 1960s and early
1970s to those of their grown children, the report found that
one in three of blacks from middle-class families earned more
than their parents, compared to two-thirds of Whites with
comparable backgrounds.
''Overall, incomes are going up. But not all children are
benefiting equally from the American dream,'' wrote author
Julia Isaacs, a fellow at Brookings, in the report.
The roadblocks to achieving the American Dream have help cast
a pall of pessimism over African Americans, according to another
survey by the Pew Research Center of White and Black attitudes.
Nearly three in 10 said they were worse off than five years
ago, one in five reported that their lives had improved and
only 44 percent expressed optimism about their future.
But as Chicago Urban League President Cheryle Jackson observed
in a recent National Public Radio commentary, people of color
have good reason to possess a less-than-cheery outlook.
“The fabric of the American Dream is made up of mobility.
You don’t have to be born rich or successful if you
can get there by your own hard work. The belief that we can
all make ourselves better unites us as Americans. But the
pathway to success is increasingly obscured or nonexistent
for many African Americans,” she noted. “More
and more one’s economic future is largely decided by
what zip code one is born into. Urban communities have the
worst schools, the fewest jobs and lack commerce and retail.”
There is a great deal of anxiety, cynicism and pessimism
today, especially in urban communities. Growing rates of crime,
unemployment and mortgage foreclosures are shrinking wealth,
which exacerbates the dissatisfaction. And incidents such
as the “Jena Six” and how they've been handled
have fed into the feeling of blacks that no one will stand
up to defend them.
Whites held a very different opinion of Black progress,
according to the Pew Center: They were twice as likely to
see gains in the past five years compared to their African
American counterparts. This finding indicates that too many
Americans, Whites and even some Blacks, labor under the misconception
that the playing field has indeed leveled and that the civil
rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s was enough to reverse
decades of discrimination.
But the truth is that it represents one phase of an ongoing
struggle for parity, especially of the pocketbook. Last July,
we unveiled our Opportunity Compact: Blueprint for Economic
Equality, a set of policy prescriptions to jumpstart urban
American, to motivate our leaders to address economic inequities
among Americans more than four decades after the first civil
rights movement.
Economic empowerment means better jobs. Better jobs mean
stronger communities. Stronger communities mean better schools
and safer streets that attract more investment, which refuels
the cycle of economic empowerment.
Marc Morial is president and CEO of the National Urban
League.
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