Wealth-accumulation study shows stark gaps among Hispanics and Blacks
Saturday, October 16, 2004 at 04:48AM
TheSpook
Latino households have an average of less than a 10th of
the wealth that white households have, according to a new national
study due out Saturday by the Pew Hispanic Center, a nonpartisan
research organization. The study finds that blacks lag even further
behind in the accumulation of wealth. The median net worth of a Latino
household in the United States in 2002 was $7,932, compared with
$88,651 for white households, according to the study. The net worth for
black households was $5,988. The stark difference in wealth means
blacks and Latinos are more vulnerable to economic downturns and less
likely to be able to save for retirement or to pass on to their
children. "We're not talking about being rich; we're talking about
owning a home and having a savings account," said Robert Suro, director
of the Pew Hispanic Center. But wealth "does have a large
intergenerational effect, which means families are able to pay for
their children's education and help them purchase their first home."
The report culls data from the U.S. Census Bureau on home ownership
rates, income, savings and other factors. Researchers looked at data
from 1996 to 2002 to track household wealth through the 2001 recession.
During that recession, the wealth of black and Latino households shrank
by 27 percent, while that of whites increased by 2 percent, said Rakesh
Kochhar, the study's author and a research associate at the center. [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.