Economist Sandy Darity discusses his plan to close the racial wealth gap, focusing on 'baby bonds' for children, group identities in economic decisions, and the impact of historical injustices on wealth accumulation. The conversation explores immigrant wealth, education's role in wealth gaps, and the transformative potential of universal basic wealth.
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Quick takeaways
Stratification economics emphasizes group dynamics in economic decisions, challenging traditional individual-focused economics.
Intergenerational transfers, not individual savings, are key to wealth accumulation, showing the importance of inherited wealth.
Deep dives
Understanding Stratification Economics
Stratification economics focuses on relative positions among groups, emphasizing group interactions influencing economic thinking. It challenges traditional economics by considering status and group dynamics in decision-making, highlighting how status aligns with material advantage. For instance, in the recent election, individuals' relative position anxieties affected economic opinions, combining concerns of group and individual comparisons.
Intergenerational Wealth and its Impact
Wealth accumulation primarily stems from intergenerational transfers rather than individual savings behaviors. Historical policies like the GI Bill disproportionately benefited whites, hindering wealth building for black communities. Researchers like Alexandre Killewald affirm the strong link between inherited wealth and subsequent generations' outcomes, confirming the dominant role of past family wealth in shaping individuals' economic trajectories.
Role of Passive vs. Active Savings in Wealth Building
Passive savings, driven by assets' appreciations like homeownership, plays a crucial role in wealth accumulation, surpassing the impact of active savings behaviors. The distinction between passive and active savings is essential in understanding the wealth disparities, illustrating how initial endowments significantly influence individuals' economic outcomes.
The Baby Bonds Proposal and Wealth Redistribution
The Baby Bonds proposal advocates for a universal program with class-differentiated trust funds given to every American child based on family wealth. These funds offer opportunities for secure economic futures, potentially altering the vision and prospects for young individuals. This scheme aligns with Universal Basic Wealth principles, aiming to address wealth disparities and transform economic opportunities for future generations.
Here’s something to consider: For families in which the lead earner has a college degree, the average white family has $180,500 in wealth. The average black family? $23,400. That’s a difference of almost $160,000 — $160,000 that could be used to send a kid to college, get through an illness, start a small business, or make a down payment on a home that builds wealth for the next generation, too. Sandy Darity is an economist at Duke University, and much of his work has focused on the racial wealth gap, and how to close it. He’s a pioneer of “stratification economics” — a branch of study that takes groups seriously as economic units, and thinks hard about how group incentives change our behavior and drive our decisions. In this podcast, we talk about stratification economics, as well as Darity’s idea of “baby bonds”: assets that would build to give poor children up to $50,000 in wealth by the time they become adults, which would in turn give them a chance to invest in themselves or their future the same way children from richer families do. Think of it as a plan for universal basic wealth — and people are listening: Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ), a past guest on this show, recently released a plan to closely tracked Darity’s proposal. I know, I know, the election is in a day. But right now, we don’t know who will win. So how about spending some time thinking about what someone who actually wanted to ease problems like wealth inequality could do if they did have power? Recommended books: Caste, Class, and Race by Oliver Cox Capitalism and Slavery by Eric Williams Black Reconstruction in America by W.E.B. DuBois