When the Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863, the black community owned less than one percent of the United States’ total wealth. More than 150 years later, that number has barely budged.
According to a new book by Mehrsa Baradaran, The Color of Money, this absence of wealth isn’t just a failure to atone for oppression imposed by slavery and Jim Crow — it’s the product of contemporary acts to maintain their legacies.
Today, the racial wealth gap persists in building wealth for those who already have it and sowing debt among those who don’t. Many policies animated by this trend — fees and fines levied my municipal governments and the criminal justice system; residential segregation; the rise of predatory payday lenders — disappear mainstream banks from communities of color, pass off the responsibility of investment in their wealth, and enforce conditions that disproportionately push them from profit to poverty.
Join New America NYC and the NYU McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research for a conversation with legal, business, and racial equity leaders on the fight for economic justice and how to pioneer strategies for reforming how government works — and who it serves.
Opening Remarks
Scott M. Stringer @NYCComptroller
Comptroller, City of New York
Elana Broitman @elanabroitman
Director, New America NYC
Michael A. Lindsey @DrMikeLindsey
Director, NYU McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research
Participants
Mehrsa Baradaran @MehrsaBaradaran
J. Alton Hosch Associate Professor of Law, University of Georgia School of Law
Author, The Color of Money: Black Banks and the Racial Wealth Gap
Michael A. Lindsey @DrMikeLindsey
Director, NYU McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research
Blondel Pinnock @blondel
Senior Vice President and Chief Lending Officer, Carver Federal Savings Bank
Anne Stuhldreher @AnneStuhldreher
Director of Financial Justice, City and County of San Francisco
Fellow, New America CA
Clyde Vanel @clydevanel
Assembly Member (District 33), New York State Assembly