Let's make his dream a reality
By Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, Chuck Collins
This January marks what would have been Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s 95th birthday. Nearly a century after the late civil rights leader’s birth, it’s a good time to reflect on the work still to be done.
Just over 60 years ago, in his famous “I Have A Dream”
speech at the 1963 March on Washington, King declared: “We refuse to believe
that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this
nation. And so we’ve come to cash this check, a check that will give us upon
demand the riches of freedom and the security of justice.”
Sixty years on, as our report “Still A Dream” highlighted late last year,
there’s been some progress. The African American community is experiencing
record low unemployment, record highs in income and educational attainment, and
has seen a massive decline in income poverty since the 1960s.
Despite all that, the check for racial economic equality
is still bouncing. Without intervention, we found it will take centuries for
Black wealth to catch up with white wealth in this country.
The 1960s were years of crucial economic progress for African Americans, even as the Black Freedom struggle faced assassinations and government suppression. In 1959, when King was 30, 55 percent of African Americans lived in income poverty. By what would have been his 40th birthday in 1969 (a year after his assassination), that poverty rate had dropped to 32 percent.
Yet this substantial progress still wasn’t enough to
bridge the radical and ongoing racial economic divide between Blacks and
whites. And since then, progress has slowed.
Compared to the political and economic progress of the
1960s, the 21st century has been much less fruitful — even as the country saw
its first African American president and a national recognition of police
brutality through the Black Lives Matter protests. From 2000 to 2021, there was
only a 3 percentage point decline in Black poverty (22.5 percent to 19.5
percent).
One modest area of progress: the unemployment rate for
African Americans is no longer twice that of whites. Since 2018, Black
unemployment has reached record lows of 5 and 6 percent, except during the
18-month recession caused by COVID-19. But as of 2021, Black unemployment was
still about 1.8 times that of white unemployment.
The racial wealth divide was created by federal policies
and national practices like segregation, discrimination, redlining, mass
incarceration, and more. So it will require federal policy and national
practices to close the divide.
And just as massive federal investment was necessary to
develop the white American middle class, so too is it essential for a massive
federal investment to bridge racial economic inequality.
Investing in affordable housing and programs designed to
strengthen homeownership for African Americans will be essential. Other
important policies include investments like a national baby bond program
targeted at African Americans, national health care, and breaking up the
dynastic concentration of wealth that’s made our country more unequal for all
Americans.
Going 60 years without substantially narrowing the
Black-white wealth and income divide is a policy failure. In this election
year, policies that can finally bridge the Black-white divide should be at the
forefront of our national debate.
Making a dream into a reality is challenging work, but it’s something our country has the resources to attain. The national celebration of Dr. King’s 95th birthday should be a time to rededicate ourselves to this work.
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, Chuck Collins: Dedrick Asante-Muhammad is the chief of Race, Wealth, and Community at the National Community Reinvestment Coalition. Chuck Collins directs the Program on Inequality and co-edits Inequaity.org at the Institute for Policy Studies. They are co-authors of the report, Still a Dream: Over 500 Years to Black Economic Equality. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.