|
(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The official unemployment rate is 15.8
percent among Blacks and 13 percent among Latinos; Blacks earn only 57
cents for each dollar of White family income, Latinos earn 59 cents; and
Blacks have only 10 cents of net wealth while Latinos have 12 cents to
every dollar of net wealth that Whites have.
As documented in the report "State of the Dream 2011: Austerity for
Whom?," this is the precarious state in which Blacks and Latinos find
themselves as the nation, still struggling amidst the Great Recession,
paused earlier this month to remember the life of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. who was gunned down while leading the Poor People's Campaign in
1968.
The 8th annual "State of the Dream" report from United for a Fair
Economy analyzes the policy positions of the new House majority -
shrinking government and cutting taxes for those at the top - and their
implications on communities of color.
"Austerity measures based on the conservative tenets of less
government and lower taxes will ratchet down the standard of living for
all Americans, while simultaneously widening our nation's racial and
economic divide," said Brian Miller, executive director of United for a
Fair Economy and co-author of the report.
Original analyses in "State of the Dream 2011" show the clear
beneficiaries of the top-end tax cuts included in the December tax deal.
Whites are three times more likely than Blacks and 4.6 times more
likely than Latinos to have incomes of $250,000 or more, and thus
receive a disproportionate benefit from the extension of the Bush tax
cuts for top-tier earners. Special tax breaks for investment income flow
overwhelmingly to whites as well. Blacks earn 13 cents and Latinos earn
eight cents to each dollar of white dividend income. Capital gains
income shows similar disparities as documented in the report.
"The deficits that these tax cuts help create are being used to
justify a host of austerity measures that will harm Americans of all
races, but will hit Blacks and Latinos the hardest," adds Miller. "With
42 percent of Blacks and 37 percent of Latinos lacking the funds to meet
minimal household expenses for even three months should they become
unemployed, cutting public assistance programs will have devastating
impacts on Black and Latino workers."
The report documents the relative importance of safety-net programs
under threat, such as Social Security, to Blacks and Latinos.
"On the frontline of the budget cuts are the state and federal
workers that police our streets, educate our children, and inspect our
food supplies," adds Miller. "Severe cuts to our public sector work
force will erode our nation's ability to meet the needs of all Americans
regardless of race. At the same time, the brunt of those layoffs will
be felt by African Americans who are disproportionately employed in
public sector jobs for a host of historic reasons."
Blacks are 30 percent more likely to work in public-sector jobs than
the general work force and 70 percent more likely to work for the
federal government. The report also documents the greater strides that
Blacks and Latinos have made in achieving parity with their white
counterparts in the public administration jobs threatened by budget-cut
proposals.
The report - which can be downloaded at www.faireconomy.org /dream -
calls on policymakers to reject austerity measures that will increase
economic inequality and worsen the racial divide. In light of the
startling facts of racial economic disparity documented in the report,
additional policy steps are called for, including increased federal aids
to states and cities, effective jobs programs, restoring the
progressive tax system, redirecting unproductive federal spending,
strengthening workers' rights, and protecting public-sector jobs.
United for a Fair Economy is a national, independent, nonpartisan,
501©(3) non-profit organization located in Boston, MA, which works to
rein in extreme inequalities and promote a more broadly shared
prosperity. More information is available at www.faireconomy.org.
Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Louisiana Weekly
|