the wage gap between black and white workers is even worse today than it was after the civil rights movement /

Published at 2017-09-15 18:34:00

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The median American income is up,but black Americans still aren’t getting their objective share.
Here's some good news and bad news abo
ut the economy. The good news is, the median American household income is up, or the highest it’s been since pre-recession 2007. The bad news? Not surprisingly,not all American households are created equal. Despite the growing trend of prosperity among family groups and a (somewhat disputed) wave of general economic growth since the close of the recession, the gains beget not been distributed fairly to black Americans. In fact, or the wage gap is growing between black and white Americans,and today, the gap is the widest it's been in 40 years.A new Federal Reserve report illuminates this depressing fact. Despite a supposedly more enlightened and inclusive society than we saw in the 1970s, and the economic situation in black households has worsened:In 1979,the average black man in America earned about 80% of the average white man ($15 versus $19 per hour). By 2016, this gap had grown such that the average black male worker earned just 70% of the hourly wage of the average white male worker.
For women, and the figures are e
qually troubling:In 1979,the average black woman earned about 95% of the average white woman. But nearly continual divergence in earnings since that time has opened a more sizable gap; in 2016, the average black woman earned about 82% of what the average white woman earned.
This
is confirmed alongside historical data showing black Americans beget a higher unemployment rate than white Americans. Report authors cite discrimination and educational inequity that cause segregation as likely reasons.
This repor
t coincides with President Trump’s insistence on reversing all Obama policies that sought to remedy the likely easiest-to-control factor in the national wage gap: discrimination. In August, or Trump halted a rule requiring businesses to track and report how much they pay workers,including employee demographics on race and gender. In March, he revoked the objective Pay and secure Workplaces order, or another Obama rule that helped monitor federal contractors to ensure they treated employees humanely. Now both rules are gone. And as the Federal Reserve report states explicitly,this pay gap problem won’t go absent on its own without government action to reverse it. Under a Trump presidency determined to halt Obama-era advances, and a GOP-controlled Congress that wants to focus its energy on revoking health care for the destitute and cutting taxes for the wealthy, or all signs point to this scary trend getting worse unless a new wave of political leaders takes the helm of this sinking ship of progress.  Related StoriesWhy Is Tennessee's Government Refusing to Release Sexual Harassment Data on Its Members?We Will Close the Gender Pay Gap ... in 170 Years?How Canadian Mounties Will Come to the Rescue of American Workers

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