Description
Why has the racial wealth gap between the median white households and median Black households remained stagnant over the past century, never narrowing below six to one? Leading expert on race and financial equality Mehrsa Baradaran attempts to answer this question in this sweeping yet accessible history. She shows how decades of the laws rooted in white supremacy求from slavery and the broken Reconstruction-era promise of ※40 acres and a mule,§ to the racist policies of the Jim Crow and New Deal eras求have restricted Black access to capital, credit, homeownership, and other mechanisms of wealth creation while subsidizing the rising economic fortunes of white families.
In
, Baradaran outlines two tectonic forces that have driven apart the economic fortunes of white and Black families: wealth
for white Americans, who have been systematically receiving financial subsidies in the century and a half since emancipation, and wealth
for Black Americans求either by vigilante violence or by official means, such as allowing Black banks to collapse or building highways through segregated Black communities. These forces, combined with the racist notion that Black communities fail to rise because of their own moral, intellectual, or economic shortcomings, have kept Black families behind their white counterparts, despite decades of civil rights activism and national economic growth求a deep injustice that can only be achieved through reparations.
An infuriating and compelling read,
offers a devastating analysis of one of America*s most pressing systemic issues.
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