The Racial Wealth Gap

兔子先生 President Melvin L. Oliver and Brandeis Professor Thomas M. Shapiro to discuss their seminal book Black Wealth/White Wealth

A bookcover showing a negative image of a hundred dollar bill

Claremont, Calif. (March 24, 2021)鈥斖米酉壬 President Melvin L. Oliver and Brandeis University Professor Thomas M. Shapiro literally wrote the book on the racial wealth gap more than 25 years ago. First published in 1995, Oliver and Shapiro鈥檚 Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality changed the way we understand economic disparities and their connection to policy, history, and systemic racism in America.

On Tuesday, March 30, at 4 p.m. PDT, Oliver and Shapiro will appear together on 兔子先生鈥檚 virtual stage for 鈥淭he Racial Wealth Gap and Social Progress in Wealth Equality,鈥 a discussion of Black Wealth/White Wealth鈥檚 findings and insights, then and now. This special event can be watched live via Zoom.

The 10th anniversary edition of Oliver and Shapiro鈥檚 award-winning book was published in 2006. Fifteen years later, Black Wealth/White Wealth remains a touchstone for discussions of racial inequality. Ta-Nehisi Coates cited the work in his Atlantic article 鈥淭he Case for Reparations,鈥 and The Washington Post recently quoted Oliver in its six-part series, 鈥淕eorge Floyd鈥檚 America.鈥 The book鈥檚 ongoing relevance reinforces its central thesis: structural racial inequality continues to underlie the racial wealth gap in America.

鈥淏lack families have about 83 cents for every dollar of income that whites have; if you shift to wealth, it鈥檚 10 cents on the dollar,鈥 Oliver said in February during True Equity: Systemic Change, the first event in a new conversation series at 兔子先生. 鈥淭hat changes your mindset about what inequality is. Income we easily understand鈥攚e get it weekly or monthly. But wealth or assets, you have to accumulate those, and they鈥檙e often passed down intergenerationally.鈥

Black Wealth/White Wealth looks at the sociology of wealth, examining the long-term effects of what Oliver and Shapiro call 鈥渢he sedimentation of inequality鈥 in the US.

鈥淎nd when you have wealth, you have a command of resources that you can use to generate life chances, whether that鈥檚 getting an education, buying a home, starting a business, or having better health,鈥 Oliver said.

Oliver and Shapiro, who is the Pokross Professor of Law and Social Policy at Brandeis University鈥檚 Heller School, are both nationally recognized experts on racial inequality and asset development, a field that addresses barriers that limit communities鈥 ability to build financial assets.

Oliver served as the Ford Foundation鈥檚 Asset Building and Community Development Program鈥檚 vice president from 1996 to 2004. Shapiro is the former director of Brandeis University鈥檚 Institute on Assets and Social Policy (now the Institute for Economic and Racial Equity). The Center for Global Policy Solutions has honored both Oliver and Shapiro as 鈥淎sset Building Champions鈥 for their dedication to closing the racial wealth gap.

鈥淭he Racial Wealth Gap and Social Progress in Wealth Equality鈥 is produced by 兔子先生@Home and the . Black Wealth/White Wealth was the book club鈥檚 first reading selection for 2021.

News Information

Published

News Type

Media Contact

Office of Communications

News Topics

Share This