What A 1968 Report Tells Us About The Persistence Of Racial Inequality

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What A 1968 Report Tells Us About The Persistence Of Racial Inequality
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'Across a number of indicators, racial economic progress has actually slowed or reversed over the last century,' one economist says. Her research finds the earnings gap between Black and white workers has stayed nearly the same since the mid-to-late '70s.

, which finds the same thing:"The deep — perhaps the central driver of what determines kids' life outcomes — is the environment in which they're growing up," Chetty says."Childhood exposure," he says, to healthy environments with low poverty and crime rates, successful role models, good schools, social trust, and two-parent households is a huge boost to the likelihood kids will succeed as adults.the effects of an environment are profound.

But Chetty sees a glimmer of hope in the data: the racial disparities in mobility are driven almost entirely by black men, not black women."We're seeing much higher rates of economic mobility for black women — actually somewhat comparable to those for white women." Black women, on average, are still more likely to grow up in poor neighborhoods and be disadvantaged on a number of fronts compared to white women.

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