The yield curve inverted further this week, stoking more fears that a recession will soon hit the United States. But after 10 years of eco...
The yield curve inverted further this week, stoking more fears that a recession will soon hit the United States. But after 10 years of economic growth, a tight labor market, and a stock market that has reached record highs, who will bear the brunt during a recession?
If history were to repeat itself, minorities will be the hardest hit during a recession, thanks to its impact on housing and the job market, according to data and studies gathered during the Great Recession a decade ago. The net worth of the typical household dropped by a staggering 40% (roughly $50,000), erasing some two decades of gains for each household in just three years. But the recession did not impact everyone equally, hitting blacks and Hispanics harder than other groups.
A silent economic depression
A 2011 Pew Research report found that by the time the Great Recession ended in 2009, that median wealth fell by 66% for Hispanics and 53% for black households. That’s compared to just 16% among white families. “As a result of these declines,” the report noted, “the typical black household had just $5,677 in wealth (assets minus debts) in 2009; the typical Hispanic household had $6,325 in wealth; and the typical white household had $113,149.” . REUTERS/Jeff Zelevansky (UNITED STATES)
Minorities were also hit hard when the housing bubble burst, which eventually triggered the recession in 2007. Homeownership rate for Hispanics fell, hitting 47% in 2009 from 51% in 2005. The study notes that this might be due to the “disproportionate share” of Hispanics who live in California, Florida, Nevada, and Arizona — some of the states that saw the steepest declines in housing values since the real estate market bubble in the 1990s. According to the National Association of Realtors, by 2009, the black homeownership rate was 44.5%, down from 49% in 2004. The white homeownership rate by the end of the recession was 71%, down from 76% just 5 years prior.
Minorities also suffered the most when the economic downturn caused the unemployment rate to soar. According to a 2010 study from the Institute of Government & Public Affairs at the University of Illinois, some 8.1 million jobs were lost since the start of the recession in December 2007. By October 2009, the unemployment rate for whites was 9.5%. It was 15.7% for blacks, and 13.1% for Hispanics. “Many American Blacks today are already experiencing a silent economic depression that, in terms of unemployment, equals or exceeds the Great Depression of 1929,” states the 2009 report “The Silent Depression,” from the nonpartisan organization United for a Fair Economy.
Shut out from recovery
Despite the gains made in the economy over the last decade, blacks and Latinos have not made as large strides during this economic recovery as their white counterparts. Simply put, minorities haven’t made enough gains to weather a new impending storm.
On a national level across all races, the top 1% captured 85% of post-recession income growth from 2009 to 2013, according to an Economic Policy Institute study on income inequality. In some states, they recovered 100% of those gains. But when broken down by race, blacks and Hispanics haven’t fared as well as their white counterparts.
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