Title: The Economic Recovery and Structural Racialization
1The Economic Recovery and Structural Racialization
60th Annual Conference of the Council on
Foundations. Tuesday, May 5, 2009
- john a. powell
- Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
and Ethnicity - Williams Chair in Civil Rights Civil Liberties,
Moritz College of Law
2How does race work today?
- There are practices, cultural norms and
institutional arrangements that help create
maintain (disparate) racialized outcomes - We call this structural racialization
- It is a very different way of looking at race
- The way race matters changes over time
(progress/retreat) - We must consider how we each stand differently
with respect to our opportunities for work,
education, parenting, retirement - We must understand the work our institutions do,
not what we wished they would do in order to make
them more equitable and fair
3THINKING OF RACE AS THE MINERS CANARY
- The Miners Canary metaphor
- Disparities facing communities of color are
indicators of larger impending societal
challenges - Ex Race and predatory lending, which contributed
to the subprime debacle - Threatening the entire US economy
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4Capital Market Credit crunch
Banks, police and courts saddled with foreclosures
Families lose their homes, wealth and safety
SUBPRIME LENDING We didnt care
about the canary...
Affected neighborhoods are being reduced to
ghost towns
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Reduced spending and retail flight
5Opportunity is racialized
- Structural racialization the joint operation of
institutions produces racialized outcomes. - Structures unevenly distribute benefits, burdens,
and racialized meaning. - In 1960, African-American families in poverty
were 3.8 times more likely to be concentrated in
high-poverty neighborhoods than poor whites. - In 2000, they were 7.3 times more likely.
- This uneven distribution has negative
consequences not just for those with the greatest
need, but all of us.
6Opportunity is spatialized
- Structural racialization involves a series of
exclusions, often anchored in (and perpetuating)
spatial segregation. - Historically marginalized people of color and the
very poor have been spatially isolated from
economic, political, educational and
technological power via reservations, Jim Crow,
Appalachian mountains, ghettos, barrios, and the
culture of incarceration.
7Opportunity is complex and cumulative
- Rebecca Blank builds on Myrdals concept of
cumulative causation. - In the U.S., while whites are poor in greater
numbers, people of color are more likely to be in
prolonged poverty and to suffer the cumulative
effects (poor health, lack of labor market
experience, inadequate education) - Single-issue policies do not adequately address
the multiple oppressions of poverty
8Opportunity stimulus planning
- How do we make it fair, sustainable, accountable?
- Incentives for inclusion of people of color
- Grants and loans for small and minority-, women-,
and community-disadvantaged businesses - Collect data by race and gender to understand
impacts of economic recovery policy - Investment in public transit
(prioritize projects that connect
people to jobs)
Source Maya Wiley, Center for Social Inclusion
9Opportunity foreclosure relief
- How do we make it fair, sustainable, accountable?
- Sustainable credit options for low-income
families and credit-deprived neighborhoods (fair
investment in all communities) - Living-wage jobs and green housing standards
(economic and environmental sustainability) - Disciplined, fair and flexible underwriting
standards a robust retooling of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac and an overhaul of financial
regulation (accountability)
10Seeing the Connections
- Attempts to address singular issues in isolated
ways will ultimately fail - Targeted interventions must recognize the
interconnected nature of our structures - While many policy areas can appear distinct, we
must think of them collectively. - Ex Transportation
- Is this an urban policy issue?
- An environmental issue?
- A jobs/economic issue?
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11People are differentially situated
- Example controlling for risk factors,
African Americans were 15-30 more
likely than whites to get subprime
loans for purchase and for
refinance - Likely refinance targets elderly, often
widowed, African American women in urban areas - For Latinos, similar numbers for purchase, but
not for refinance - Many Latino homebuyers were recent, first
generation homebuyers who could not be
automatically underwritten (multiple income
earners, cash, local credit, etc.)
Sources Graciela Aponte (National Council of
LaRaza) and Debbie Bocian (Center for Responsible
Lending) presentations at The Economic Policy
Institute panel Race, Ethnicity and the Subprime
Mortgage Crisis on June 12, 2008 in WDC and
Baltimore Finds Subprime Crisis Snags Women in
The New York Times online, Jan. 15, 2008
12Ex Economic Stimulus Package
- The economic stimulus package fails to directly
account for race. - Race is a key component of many major economic
issues. - Ex Subprime/Foreclosure crisis
- People of color are more than three times as
likely as whites to have subprime mortgages. - Borrowers of color were more than 30 percent more
likely to receive a higher-rate loan than white
borrowers, even after accounting for differences
in risk. - Besides considering race-sensitive design,
- we must be concerned about the impacts.
Rogers, Christy. Subprime Loans, Foreclosure,
and the Credit Crisis - A Primer. Dec. 2008.
13Racially Sensitive Policies
- We must embrace a systems thinking perspective
when forming policies. - What do racially sensitive policies look like?
- Targeted They recognize the nature of our
interconnected structures / larger inequitable,
institutional framework. - Pay attention to situatedness They account for
the fact that people are situated differently in
the economic and social landscape of society. - Driven by outcomes It may seem great if
unemployment is cut in half, but if all the jobs
go to white males, serious problems remain.
14Racially Sensitive Policies (cont)
- What do racially sensitive policies look like?
- Transparent - Transparency allows for gauging
progress and making corrections if necessary. - Multi-faceted Incentivize a systems approach.
Reorient how we think about policy. - Include people of color in the process Their
input is vital. - Serve as a bridge to the next economy These
policies should be the stepping stones for the
future.
15Race-Sensitive Policy Analysis of the Stimulus
- How do we make the stimulus fair, sustainable,
accountable? - Incentives for inclusion of people of color
- Grants and loans for small and minority-, women-,
and community-disadvantaged businesses - Collect data by race and gender to understand
impacts of economic recovery policy - Investment in public transit (prioritize
projects that connect people to
jobs)
Wiley, Maya. Economic Recovery for Everyone
Racial Equity and Prosperity, Center for Social
Inclusion, 12/2008.
16Toward a Just Economic Recovery
- Focus on strategic interventions / turning points
- Will this make the water turn into steam?
- Reflect on the intersection of need and
opportunity - Some communities and people have greater needs
(i.e., communities suffering from high
foreclosure rates) - Seek collaborative opportunities
- Allocate your money coherently a little bit in
a lot of places is not as effective as focused
efforts that can later be replicated elsewhere - Embrace advocacy
- This is our government, our money, and our
opportunity!
17Targeted Universalism
- This approach supports the needs of the
particular while reminding us that we are all
part of the same social fabric. - Universal, yet captures how people are
differently situated - Inclusive, yet targets those who are most
marginalized - Example Every school as a performing school
- What does each school need to get there?
- What does each student, family, teacher,
community need? - What are their strengths and constraints?
18Targeted Universalism
- Targeted Universalism recognizes racial
disparities and the importance of eradicating
them, while acknowledging their presence within a
larger inequitable, institutional framework - Targeted universalism is a common framework
through which to pursue justice - A model which recognizes our linked fate
- A model where we all grow together
- A model where we embrace
collective solutions
19Toward a Just Economic Recovery
- What are these billions of dollars actually
fixing? - Are we only fixing the status quo?
- Are we transformative yet?
- Are opportunity gaps shrinking?
- Mind the gap fix the gap
- Reduce the existing disparities between
communities of color both in terms of people and
places while growing the economy for all - This requires
- Baseline Monitoring Strategy
- Reflect on what it means to spend money fairly
20Understanding our linked fates
- Racialized structures and policies have created
the correlation of race and poverty. People
assume that only people of color are harmed. - In reality, these effects are far reaching and
impact everyone we share a linked fate
21Linked FatesTransformative Change
- Our fates are linked, yet our fates have been
socially constructed as disconnected (especially
through the categories of class, race, gender,
etc.). - We need socially constructed bridges to
transform our society. - Conceive of an individual as connected toinstead
of isolated fromthy neighbor.