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NEW REPORT: THE STATE
OF THE DREAM
BLACK-WHITE GAPS STILL
WIDE - SOME EVEN WIDENING -
SINCE DR. KING'S DEATH

"There is nothing new about
poverty. What is new is that we now have the techniques
and the resources to get rid of poverty. The real question
is whether we have the will."
-- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Racial inequities in unemployment, family income, imprisonment,
average wealth and infant mortality are actually worse
than when Dr. King was killed, according to United for
a Fair Economy's new report, "The State of
the Dream 2004: Enduring Disparities in Black and White,"
by Dedrick D. Muhammad, Attieno Davis, Meizhu Lui and
Betsy P. Leondar-Wright. The report, on the web at http://www.faireconomy.org,
contrasts the vision of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
with the reality of the continued racial divide.
Progress has been made in narrowing the divide in per
capita income, poverty, homeownership, education, life
expectancy and median wealth, but so slowly that the
gaps would take decades or even centuries to close at
the current rate.
"As Americans celebrate the King Holiday and listen
to President Bush's State of the Union address, we must
hold in mind the failure of the most powerful nation
in the world to create opportunity for all its people,"
said Dedrick M. Muhammad. "No longer do we hear
about a War on Poverty or a Great Society. It has been
replaced by compassionate conservatism, which has been
very conservative in its compassion."
-- The typical Black family had 60% as much income
as a white family in 1968, but only 58% as much in 2002.
-- One in nine African Americans cannot find a job.
Black unemployment is more than twice the white rate
- a wider gap than in 1972.
-- Black infants are almost two-and-a-half-times as
likely as white infants to die before age one - a greater
gap than in 1970.
-- White households had an average net worth of $468,200
in 2001, more than six times the $75,700 of Black households.
In 1989 (the oldest comparable data available), average
white wealth was five-and-a-half times Black wealth.
"The phrase 'snail's pace' doesn't describe the
slow progress in some black-white gaps, because snails
travel faster than that," said Meizhu Lui.
-- At the slow rate that the Black-white poverty gap
has been narrowing since 1968, it would take 150 years,
until 2152, to close.
-- For every dollar of white per-capita income, African
Americans had 55 cents in 1968 - and only 57 cents in
2001. At this pace, it would take Blacks 581 years to
get the remaining 43 cents.
"African Americans have endured unbearable disparities
for too long," said Attieno Davis. "581 years
is too long to wait for our missing 43 cents on the
dollar."
-- While white homeownership has jumped from 65% to
75% since 1970, Black homeownership has only risen from
42% to 48%. At this rate, it would take 1,664 years
to close the homeownership gap - about 55 generations.
-- If current rates of incarceration continue, one
out of three African American males born today will
be imprisoned at some point during their lifetimes.
-- At the current pace, Blacks and whites will reach
high school graduation parity in 2013, six decades after
the Brown v. Board of Education school desegregation
decision. And college graduation parity wouldn't be
reached until 2075, more than 200 years after the end
of slavery.
"Dr. King worked to instill in us all a sense
of moral urgency about the racial disparities in the
United States," said Betsy P. Leondar-Wright. "We
can honor his memory by shaking off our complacency
and committing ourselves to racial justice."
Dedrick D. Muhammad is the Racial Wealth Divide
Coordinator at United for a Fair Economy. Attieno Davis
coordinates UFE's Racial Wealth Divide education work.
Meizhu Lui is UFE's Executive Director, and Betsy
P. Leondar-Wright is UFE's Communications Director.
United for a Fair Economy is an independent national
non-profit that raises awareness that concentrated wealth
and power undermine the economy, corrupt democracy,
deepen the racial divide, and tear communities apart.
The report is available on the web at http://www.FairEconomy.org.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Betsy Leondar-Wright
Communications Director, United for a Fair Economy
(617) 423-2148 x13
37 Temple Place, 2nd floor
Boston, MA 02111
www.FairEconomy.Org
United for a Fair Economy is an independent national
organization
that raises awareness of the damaging consequences of
concentrated
wealth and power.
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