Good morning, Quartz readers! Protests around the world are bringing increased attention to the continuing gaps in economic status between white and black Americans. Data show that blacks in the US have 10 times less wealth, are 20% more likely to be
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Good morning, Quartz readers!
Protests around the world are bringing increased attention to the continuing gaps in economic status between white and black Americans. Data show that blacks in the US have [10 times less wealth]( are 20% more [likely to be unemployed]( and make 78% as much in [weekly wages]( as whites. Due to the way that government statistical agencies collect data, these numbers actually underestimate the difference.
Most official US economic statistics come from the US Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Their major surveys all exclude the [more than two million]( Americans who are incarcerated. Since black Americans are [six times more likely]( to be incarcerated than whites, and twice as likely as Hispanics, this has the effect of making it appear that African Americans are better off financially than they really are.
Moreover, 90% of [inmates are men](. âWhenever you see an employment rate for black men you know itâs BS,â says University of Chicago economist Derek Neal. âOn any given day, 7-8% of young black men are incarcerated and those people are not counted.â
Sociologist Becky Pettit has examined how ignoring the prison population distorts a variety of commonly cited statistics. For example, while conventional government stats show that the employment rate for young, low-skilled black men fell from 62% in 1980 to 42% in 2008, including incarcerated men brings the rate closer to 30%. Government statistics also show that the income gap between mid-career black and white men narrowed to 25% in 2014, compared with 35% in 1970. But that difference entirely disappears [after accounting for the increase in incarceration](.
[The chart shows median income for white men compared to black men in the US.]
Why would a government agency choose not to survey those in prison? Partly for convenience. Itâs difficult to get a random sample of incarcerated people on the phone. It may also have to do with what the survey is aiming to measure. âWeâre trying to get at people who are actively seeking and available for work, and a prisonerâs situation is very different from that,â a BLS economist told [The Outline]( in 2017.
Still, many Americans look to government data to understand racial inequality, and this data is telling a more optimistic story than it should. âDan Kopf, data editor
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Five things on Quartz we especially liked
When pushing racial equality, actions speak louder than words. Itâs great that George Floydâs death and the subsequent protests have finally pushed CEOs to speak out against racism, because their words hold power. But as [Sarah Todd writes]( companies that donât back up those words with action may be perpetuating inequality behind the scenes. She offers tangible steps business leaders can take to move beyond woke-washing and start effecting real change. âLiz Webber, senior news curator
Violent protests shouldnât delegitimize the cause. Last year in Hong Kong, protestersâ acts of vandalism gave the Chinese government a way to discredit the movement. Now, US officials are doing the same to those demonstrating in the wake of Floydâs killing. [As Mary Hui deftly points out]( violent protests are sometimes productive, even when itâs not the protestors instigating it. âAlex Ossola, special projects editor
African startups and the pandemic. 2020 was going to be a golden year for Africaâs rising startup sceneâthen coronavirus happened. In this weekâs field guide Yomi Kazeem looks at [the startup response across the continent]( (⦠Quartz member exclusive). Companies arenât just cutting costs but instead expanding their offerings or rethinking their business. Itâs an insight not just into the current circumstances, but into the necessary adaptive fabric of African startups. âAnnalisa Merelli, reporter
A sign of the times. Public health signs will most likely be prominent in our lives for the foreseeable futureâand prominent is exactly what they should be. [Anne Quito breaks down]( the careful thought that goes into signs that could actually change peopleâs behaviorâand how itâs necessary for companies to get off their branding high horse and do what works best. âSusan Howson, news editor
To binge-watch or to page-turn? Most people across the globe are saving lots of travel time as they work from homeâand with all these extra minutes in a day, bookworms shouldâve ideally cleared their shelves by now. But thatâs not happening. [Manavi Kapur explains why reading is on a decline]( and video streaming subscriptions are through the roof. Itâs just hard to focus on the latest novel when youâre stressed. âItika Sharma Punit, Quartz India co-editor
Did you know?
Hong Kongâs legislature voted to criminalize mocking Chinaâs national anthem this week. Last year, Hong Kong protesters [crowdsourced their own](. Learn more about national anthems and the way they uniteâand divideâus in [the latest Quartz Weekly Obsession](.
Next week, weâll be taking a hard look at tear gas. Want to get the Weekly Obsession delivered straight to your inbox for free every Wednesday? Hit the button below, and weâll get it to you.
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Five things from elsewhere that made us smarter
Americaâs protests, viewed from the outside in. US media (present company included) has plenty of blind spots. In this incisive editorial for The Washington Post, [Karen Attiah covers the Minneapolis riots]( as if she were writing about events in a foreign country. She shows that what separates the US from the rest of the world arenât the incidents inside its bordersâbut rather the ways in which it frames them. âAnnabelle Timsit, reporter
Social justice or social distance? On Sunday, a group of infectious disease experts published [an open letter]( in support of the protests sweeping the US. By Tuesday, more than 1,000 health experts had signed on. After months of extreme caution being urged by public health officials, this about-face has led me to wonder whether sporting events or concerts that just two weeks ago felt impossible might return sooner than I thought. âMax Lockie, deputy news editor
English football may be in crisis now, but itâs back from an abyss. The Heysel stadium disaster in 1985â39 Italians died under attack from English hooligansâwas one of the sportâs darkest days, but forced a change in culture that eventually made the English game the worldâs wealthiest and most popular. This [excellent Guardian report by Simon Burnton]( reminded me how far the sport and country have come. âHasit Shah, deputy editor, global finance and economics
Chinaâs singing, dancing Uyghurs. The severe cultural and religious oppression of the Muslim ethnic group native to Chinaâs far west is well documented. Less well known, perhaps, is how this Turkic people have long used music as a way of pushing back against that oppression and keeping their culture alive. For the Los Angeles Review of Books, [Elise Anderson looks at the politics of Uyghur music]( how some of the biggest names ended up in internment. âIsabella Steger, deputy Asia editor
Europeâs sad staycation. Summer holidays are âthe lungsâ of Europe, [Danish politician Margrethe Vestager says]( in this insightful piece about what the continent is losing with summer vacations on hold. At first glance, it may seem trivial to lament that hordes of people wonât be traipsing through the European locale du jour, but Yasmeen Serhan thoughtfully unpacks not just the economic losses involved, but the cultural ones as well. âJackie Bischof, deputy membership editor
For Quartz members
The [coronavirus pandemic is forcing a reset in China-Africa relations]( from issues of race to diplomacy through aid. But the most pressing issue will be complex negotiations around debt relief. Itâs estimated that up to 20% of Africaâs debt is owed to China, making talks on easing terms critical.
But as Deborah Brautigam, director of the Johns Hopkins China Africa Research Initiative, points out, Chinaâs economic challenges post-Covid, and the fact that it has $1.9 trillion of its own debt, âmake it unlikely that we will see Beijing agree to real and wide-ranging debt relief.â [Read more in our field guide on Africa after Covid-19.](
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Weâd like to wish Quartz Africa a happy birthday! ð
Five years ago this week, we started Quartz Africa with the hope of playing a small role in improving the coverage of Africaâs economies and businesses. There is no single African story, but weâve always been determined to tell as many of the most interesting ones as we can through our lens of innovation and new ideas.
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