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March 2026

Why do racial disparities persist?

Median Black family wealth in the United States is $24,000 against $188,000 for white families, and structurally similar gaps appear in Brazil, the UK, and France despite radically different racial histories.

$24,000 and $188,000

That is the median wealth of the Black and white families the Federal Reserve has been tracking since 1989. The ratio has not meaningfully changed. The number is not in dispute. What produced it is the argument that will not resolve, because the same gap — or one structurally resembling it — shows up in countries that never had Jim Crow. Afro-Brazilians earn roughly half what white Brazilians earn. Black Britons are three times more likely to be stopped and searched. France does not collect racial statistics at all, which is itself a data point.

The paper trail

In 1934, the Federal Housing Administration drew a map of Chicago. Neighborhoods where Black families lived were outlined in red. No redline, no mortgage. No mortgage, no equity. No equity, no generational wealth. The can show you the exact block where a 1937 appraiser's note — two words, "Negro concentration" — determined whether families built wealth or didn't.

But in 2023, Nigerian Americans held postgraduate degrees at roughly four times the national average. These are Black people, subject to the same profiling. A professor whose parents arrived with nothing finds the claim that phenotype determines outcomes hard to sustain when variance within the group dwarfs variance between groups. The are not denying history. They are asking why its effects are so unevenly distributed.

The echo and the outlier

Take the 1960 wealth gap. Assume zero discrimination from that point forward. Compound both figures at historical returns for sixty-five years. You land almost exactly on today's gap. An economist who modeled this can show how compound interest on the 1960 disparity arrives at the 2024 disparity with no additional inputs. The argument is not denying racism. It is quantifying its echo.

And somewhere in all of this is a first-generation college graduate from the South Side who beat the compounding, navigated the structure, and built a life. The camp is not offering a policy prescription. It is refusing to be someone else's data point.

Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2021 — commemorating a freedom that arrived two and a half years late. That delay is the entire debate in miniature.

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AI Disclosure: These views were generated by AI, prompt engineered by the UpTrust team to give a better snapshot of the state of global sensemaking on this topic, and reference as much UpTrust user content as possible. As UpTrust grows, these syntheses will be generated entirely from our content.