Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
white female earnings ratio for full-time year-round workers was 90 percent, and for all women it was a slightly lower 87 percent (US Bureau of the Census, 1992, p. 57, table 11). If anything, both types of time series indicated evidence of a decline in the ratio in the 1990s. To extrapolate on the basis of current trends would lead one to conclude that divergence, not convergence, is the trend for the future.
We reiterate that an additional basis for skepticism about the convergence
hypothesis is the fact that data on black family incomes have never displayed the same pattern of gap closure as have the data on individual earnings or on income for persons with earnings or income. Between the mid-1960s and 1980 the
black±white family income ratio stayed in a rather narrow range between 61
and 64 percent. During the 1982 recession the ratio dipped below 60 percent. By
Racial Economic Inequality in the USA
187
1990 the mean black±white family income ratio was 62 percent and the median
black±white family income ratio was only 58 percent (US Bureau of the Census,
1992, p. 56, table 10). In 1980 one of the authors of this chapter made the
following observation, suggesting the superiority of relative family income as a gauge of relative racial well-being:
Although neither income nor earnings inequality between black and white women
measured in per capita terms have been great in the postwar era, inequality in living conditions is probably quite substantial. This is a consequence of one of the short-comings of per capita income as an index of relative well being. It ignores
how people come together socially and hence economically. White women combine
their incomes with white men far more frequently than black women combine their
incomes with white men. In fact, the large proportion of single parent, female-
headed black families indicates that black women combine their incomes with
those of black men less often than white women combine theirs with white men.
(Darity, 1980, p. 176)
The incidence of females heading black families underwent a sharp upturn in
the 1970s, accelerating throughout the 1980s, with no evidence of a peak in
sight. We computed comparative estimates of the percentage of black families
headed by women from the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey for
1976 and 1985. Nationally, the incidence of female-headed families rose from
36 to 45 percent of all black families. Particularly dramatic increases took place in the West and North Central regions. In the West the incidence rose from 25 to 47 percent and in the North Central region the incidence rose from 39 to 52
percent. For white families, the direction of movement was the same but the
magnitude was not the same. White families headed by females rose from 11
percent in 1976 to 13 percent in 1985.
Data from the Current Population Survey (see US Bureau of the Census, 1992,
Table 10, p. 56) indicate that the racial income disparity is much narrower
among married couple families. In 1991, the black±white ratio of mean income
for married couple families was 80 percent; the ratio of medians was 83 percent.
However, less than half of all black families, 47 percent (3.57 million out of 7.47
million), were married couple families. Since a near majority of black families
are now female-headed, evidence about approaching parity in relative incomes
between black and white two parent families is misleading. The growing incid-
ence of female-headed black families signals the effects of a process we refer to as the marginalization of black males. This process bears an intimate relationship
to the fragile status of the entire black population in the United States, whether male or female. Economic manifestations of the marginalization process are
plentiful.
Consider the absolute decline in labor force participation rates (LFPRS) for
males of both races that began in the early 1960s and the relative decline that
occurred after the mid-1960s. Between 1954 and 1966 the ratio of black±white
male LFPRs held fairly constant at 98 percent. But over the course of the next
decade LFPRs fell much faster for black males than for white males. As a result, 188
W. A. Darity, Jr and S. L. Myers, Jr
despite the fact that after 1976 LFPRs for black males seem to have bottomed
out, while white male rates continued to fall, a wide gap persists because of the sharp difference in rates of decline between 1966 and 1976, the very period that Freeman and Smith and Welch have touted as the period of dramatic progress for
blacks.
By 1985 the employment±population ratio for adult black males was only 55
percent, while it was 70 percent for adult white males. Almost one out of every
six black men between the ages of 25 and 54 reported zero earnings for 1984. By
1990 one out of every three black men 15 years old and over reported no
earnings (US Bureau of the Census, 1992, p. 57, table 11). There also appears
to be a bifurcation among black males based on credentials, between those with
a college education or better and those with a high school education or less. The former group has far more earnings experience in the labor market than the
latter. Pecuniary prospects are dim for young black males with a high school
education or less.
In a very interesting and revealing study, Bluestone et al. (1991) have provided a typology of Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) based on growth rates of
total non-agricultural employment and total manufacturing employment in the
1980s. They classified (1,1) cities as those with the slowest growth rates in
overall and manufacturing employment, (2,2) cities as those with mid-range
growth rates in both categories, and (3,3) cities as the fastest-growing in both categories. They then compared unemployment rates by race for males 20 years
old with less than a college education in each type of city.
The results that they report are provisional because the sample cell sizes
become relatively small for black males. But in the (1,1) cities they find that
among 20-year-olds the black male unemployment rate was 42 percent while
the white male unemployment rate was 4.1 percent. In (2,2) cities the black
male unemployment rate was 26.5 percent while the white male unemployment
rate was 3.5 percent for the same age group. Finally, in (3,3) cities the black male unemployment rate was 17.9 percent while the white male unemployment rate
was only 1.5 percent, twelve times lower than the black rate! (Bluestone et al., 1991).
Conditions became so patently bleak that even Richard Freeman performed a
complete flip-flop on his research agenda. In the 1970s Freeman sought to
explain what he labeled thè`dramatic economic progress''of black Americans.
Now he was asking, in collaboration with John Bound, ``What went wrong?
Why have relative earnings and employment fallen for young black males?''
(Bound and Freeman, 1992).
Exposure to college education does not alter comparative conditions substan-
tially for black males. Black males 25 years of age or older with one to three
years of college education and with positive earnings received, on average,
$22,979 in 1990. White males 25 years of age or older with earnings, who had
dropped out of high school, had mean earnings of $19,270, about $3,700 less.
White males who completed high school earned more than $3,000 more than
black males with some college education. Nor does completing college close the
gap. A black male with four years of college and positive earnings in 1990 would Racial Economic Inequality in the USA
189
have received mean earnings of $32,259, more than $10,000 below the mean of
$43,919 earned by white male college graduates with positive earnings (US
Bureau of the Census, 1992, table 12, pp. 47, 52).
Convergence in educational characteristics need not translate into conver-
gence in earnings. Bound and Freeman (1992, p. 16) acknowledge that the
increasingly depressed labor market experience for young black males is not
due to a corresponding deterioration in their relative quality as potential
employees: ``We find little support for the hypothesis that deteriorated labor
market skills of young blacks due, say, to poor schooling, worsened family
background resources, or increased drug use explains their declining economic
position.''
Two key points need to be made. First, the Bound±Freeman (1992) discussion
implies that the current trajectory will only worsen as more and more black
males come into the labor market from younger cohorts that are now experien-
cing even greater resource deprivation. Second, and more fundamental, inde-
pendent of the relative quality black males present to the labor market, processes persist that exclude them from comparable participation with non-black males
with similar productivity-linked characteristics. To put it bluntly, discrimination in a comprehensive sense lies at the core of matters, not just at the point of
employment but throughout an entire range of stages that affect labor market
outcomes. American society is quite distant from attaining a pure equal oppor-
tunity environment, never mind correcting for historically inherited inequalities.
Current discrimination, while creating a disadvantage for the group against
which it is directed, necessarily creates a corresponding advantage for another
group. In 1991 the Urban Institute conducted an audit study of entry-level job
access in the cities of Chicago and Washington, DC. The researchers paired
young black and white males (19±24 years of age) with fake, identical creden-
tials and had them apply for the same jobs. The subjects applied for a total of
1,052 jobs. Treatment of the applicants appeared to be neutral 73 percent of
the time, but black males faced discriminatory treatment 20 percent of the time, while white males faced discriminatory treatment only 7 percent of the
time. Therefore, black males were three times as likely to face job bias. There
were also higher rates of discrimination against black males in white-collar jobs or jobs involving direct client contact (Lawlor and Pitts, 1991, p. 1A).
Gerald Jaynes has written, ``The heralded recovery of the mid-1980s appar-
ently improved the position of white low skilled men but not black. Why? We do
not know'' (Jaynes, 1990, p. 24). But we can make a highly educated guess. The
changing structure of the US economy was narrowing the availability of well
paid blue-collar jobs, jobs that pay well without requiring advanced educational credentials. White labor's discriminatory behavior would naturally intensify
under such conditions, particularly if the heralded recovery of the mid-1980s
did not mean a sharp reversal of the deindustrialization of the US economy. It
was simply a classic case of protecting one's occupational turf from darker rivals, and it reveals the endogeneity of discriminatory practices. While much economic
research proceeds as if discrimination operates at a constant level of intensity or does not exist at all, a more plausible analysis would indicate that the degree of 190
W. A. Darity, Jr and S. L. Myers, Jr
discrimination fluctuates, in part, with the nature of aggregate conditions of
employment, without disappearing.
The only period where measured levels of in-market discrimination against
blacks declined significantly since Emancipation was during the decade
immediately following passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Thereafter, the
level of labor market discrimination has shown no further tendency to decline
significantly. From about 1975 to the present black men typically have lost
12±15 percent in earnings due to labor market discrimination (Darity, 1998).
The Widening of the Racial Earnings Gap
More recent studies on black±white economic inequality have focused on the
reversal in the pattern of alleged convergence in earnings between black and
white males in the 1980s. The puzzle is: why is there now evidence of a renewed
widening of the gap in black and white male earnings? The thrust of a substan-
tial portion of recent work on black±white economic inequality is to explain
divergence in the 1980s by restoring the pure human capital explanation of
racial economic disparity. Correspondingly, the operation of the labor market
is immunized from playing a role in directly producing racial economic inequal-
ity. The upshot is the claim that the persistent black male lag in earnings is due to deficiencies in productivity characteristics of black males, rather than a failure of the market to offer them rewards parallel to those of white males with equivalent productivity characteristics.
The skills mismatch hypothesis is used in this context in several studies.
According to this line of argument, black males possess significantly fewer skills on average than white males. In the 1980s relative rewards for highly skilled
workers rose vis-aÁ-vis less-skilled workers. Since black males are disproportionately represented among less-skilled workers, their earnings have fallen relative to white males as relative rewards for skills have moved in favor of those with
higher levels of skill acquisition.
Skills are measured in many of these studies by Armed Forces Qualification
Test (AFQT) scores available in the 1980 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth
(NLSY). Inclusion of these scores in regression analyses that seek to examine
racial earnings differences virtually eliminates unexplained residual differences in earnings between blacks and whites. Studies by O'Neill (1990), Maxwell