An Associated Press article posted by CBS News says:
Decades after the civil rights movement, racial disparities in income, education and home ownership persist and, by some measurements, are growing in the United States.
CBS cites a report recently released by the US Census Bureau as the source of this information. The article doesn’t assert that racism is directly responsible for the disparities, but it implies that it is. Among the statistics quoted from the report:
The median income for white households was $50,622 last year. It was $30,939 for black households, $36,278 for Hispanic households and $60,367 for Asian households.
CBS does not suggest that the fact that Asian income is 20 percent higher than white income means that Asians are discriminating against whites.
I’m always suspicious of data partitioned along such arbitrary lines as race and ethnicity. Who is to say that, in terms of income, education and home ownership, one black person is more like another black person than he is like some white person? What would the results have been if the data were partitioned according to income, education and home ownership instead of race and ethnicity? I think it would show that the gap has widened between those who started at the lower end and those who started with higher means. The fact that the gap has widened between blacks and whites might be due more to the fact that blacks started with less than due to some kind of discrimination.
Is this evidence that Affirmative Action is not working? AA was supposed to help compensate for the fact that blacks on average were starting out with less than whites on average. Predictably, there is a call for more government (taxpayer) spending:
(Hilary) Shelton, of the NAACP, called for more government funding for preschool programs, improving public schools and making college more affordable. “Income should not be a significant determining factor whether someone should have an opportunity to go to college,” Shelton said.
Perhaps it shouldn’t but it always has been and most likely always will be. Utopia is still over the horizon.