With Black elected officials on every level of American government the
past 40 years economic progress for Blacks largely stalled out in the 2000's,
and it went sharply into reverse during the Great Recession of 2007-2009, when
all Americans experienced big drops in wealth, income, and jobs.
The election of Barak Obama as the first Black
president in 2008 at the height of the subprime mortgage crisis, Black
home ownership had dropped back to 46 percent. As defaults and foreclosures
continue to take a heavy toll in Black communities, it has fallen further to 43
percent today.
As in all previous periods
of recession, Blacks were set back further than whites during the Great
Recession, with Black unemployment soaring to a peak of 16.7 percent and reaching
nearly 50 percent for Black youths. Reflecting the historic disparities with
whites, Blacks also have had to struggle harder to get back to break-even since
the recovery began in June 2009.
By some measures, in fact, the latest so-called Obama economic
recovery has been perhaps the harshest ever on Blacks. Median income for Black
households has dropped 10.9 percent since the recovery began, compared with a
3.6 percent fall for white households, according to Sentier Research, an
economic consulting firm.
White Americans now have 22 times more wealth than Black
Americans, a figure that has nearly doubled during the recession. According to
the Census, in 2010, media household net worth for whites totaled $110,729. For Blacks, the figure was $4,995.
According to Kevin Gray author of ‘The Decline of Black Politics: From Malcolm X to Barak Obama’
notes that “Obama hasn’t done much of substance or impact to ease, let alone
end, the depression in the Black community; he’s been on the side of the banks
and Wall Street.”
Black
Purchasing Power and the Failure to Create Black Businesses
Blacks in America have undeniable buying power that will reach a whopping 1.4 trillion by 2019. But even with incredible purchasing power African
Americans aren’t spending it with Black-owned companies.
A recent report by Nielson and Essence, only
a small part of Black America’s buying power is spent at Black-owned
businesses. In fact, “Blacks spend less money in Black-owned businesses than
other racial and ethnic groups spend in businesses owned by members of their
groups, including Hispanics and Asians,” studies have shown.
This buying gap has wide-ranging ramifications. If more
Black dollars were spent on Black businesses it would create much-needed jobs in
the African-American community.
According to a study by the Kellogg School of
Management at Northwestern University, “between
half a million and a million jobs could be created if higher-income black
households spent only $1 of every $10 at Black-owned stores and other enterprises.”
Amos
Wilson excerpt from Blueprint for Black Power:
"Black politics and activism without Black ownership of and control over primary forms and bases of power such as property, wealth, organization, etc., is the recipe for Black political and non-political powerlessness. The rather obtuse pursuit of political office and the ballot box as primary sources of power by the Black Community and its politicians without its concomitant ownership of and control over important economic resources has actually hindered the development of real Black Power in America.”
"Black politics and activism without Black ownership of and control over primary forms and bases of power such as property, wealth, organization, etc., is the recipe for Black political and non-political powerlessness. The rather obtuse pursuit of political office and the ballot box as primary sources of power by the Black Community and its politicians without its concomitant ownership of and control over important economic resources has actually hindered the development of real Black Power in America.”
“More
ominously, there appears to be a paradoxical and positive correlation between
the number of Blacks elected and appointed to high office and retrogressions in
the civil and human rights extended to Black Americans during the past twenty
years. Increases in homelessness, poverty, unemployment, criminality and
violence in the Black community; disorganization of the traditional Black
family, inadequacies in education, increases in health problems of all types,
and host of other social and political ills have all attended increases in the
number of Black elected and appointed officials."
“That
is, the more elected and appointed Black politicians, the more socio-economic
problems the Black community has suffered. While we are not implying a causal
relationship between the increase of the number of Black appointed and elected
officials and the increased misery indices of the Black community, we are
implying or asserting that their increase obscures those things which are
responsible for and do little to ameliorate or uproot the increasing prevalence
of social and economic problems in the Black community. The activities of Black
politicians, given the current inadequacy of social organization and economic
resources, harmfully distract the Black community’s attention from recognizing
and eradicating the true causes of its problems and the remediation of its sense of powerlessness."