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Report

Less Than Equal: Racial Disparities in Wealth Accumulation

Authors:

  • Signe-Mary McKernan, Urban Institute
  • Caroline Ratcliffe, Urban Institute
  • Eugene Steuerle, Urban Institute
  • Sisi Zhang, Urban Institute

Abstract

Income inequality understates the size of the economic gap between whites and minorities in the United States. In 2010, whites on average had two times the income of blacks and Hispanics, but six times the wealth. Analyses of wealth accumulation over the life cycle show that the racial wealth gap grows sharply with age. Wealth isn't just money in the bank, it's insurance against tough times, tuition to get a better education and a better job, savings to retire on, and a springboard into the middle class.