Over on Jack and Jill Politics, Rinku Sen from the Applied Research Center discusses how the president's economic policies overlook racial inequities and ultimately is not serving the people who it purports to protect. Sen writes:
"As one of the last strongholds of union jobs shrinks, we have to confront a brutal truth about work in the U.S.. Across the economy, workers of color are overrepresented in occupations with high unemployment rates: the service sector, construction and transportation. Thatβs a great deal of the reason why Black workers have been hit especially hard by layoffs and closures. Losing auto industry jobs strikes a massive blow to the ability of workers, especially Black workers, to earn middle-class incomes, to save enough to pass on to their children and to achieve some financial stability.
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In his press conference last month, President Obama was asked how the stimulus would affect Black homeowners who had suffered so much from the mortgage crisis. His response β that the disproportionate hit they took would bring a disproportionate amount of relief, and that a rising tide would lift all boats β was better than it could have been, yet not what it should have been. His answer gave the impression that sending temporary relief toward Black families would bring about their recovery. He didnβt mention the need to prevent the targeting of communities of color in the first place, nor what made Black families so vulnerable to this exploitation.
Nor did he mention the real length of time it will take to rebuild their lost wealth. In a deeply racialized economy, a βrising tideβ approach is too general to drive a fully inclusive recovery. The only way to true universalism is through full inclusion, and full inclusion requires a detailed look at the conditions and causes of the crisis in each community weβre trying to uplift. Thatβs why the first recommendation in our report is to insist on racial impact analyses β modeled after Enviromental Impact Statements β of all legislative and program proposals coming out of Congress, corporations and local and state governments. Itβs too late to prevent the crisis from hitting, but itβs not too late to ensure that communities of color arenβt left out of this recovery, as we have been from so many others."
What say you? Is Sen on the money or way off base?
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