The Great Recession, fueled by the crises
in the housing and financial markets, was universally hard on the net
worth of American families. But even as the economic recovery has begun
to mend asset prices, not all households have benefited alike, and
wealth inequality has widened along racial and ethnic lines.
The wealth of white households was 13
times the median wealth of black households in 2013, compared with eight
times the wealth in 2010, according to a new Pew Research Center
analysis of data from the Federal Reserve’s
Survey of Consumer Finances.
Likewise, the wealth of white households is now more than 10 times the
wealth of Hispanic households, compared with nine times the wealth in
2010.
The
current gap between blacks and whites has reached its highest point
since 1989, when whites had 17 times the wealth of black households. The
current white-to-Hispanic wealth ratio has reached a level not seen
since 2001. (Asians and other racial groups are not separately
identified in the public-use versions of the Fed’s survey.)
Leaving aside race and ethnicity, the net
worth of American families overall — the difference between the values
of their assets and liabilities — held steady during the economic
recovery. The typical household had a net worth of $81,400 in 2013,
according to the Fed’s survey — almost the same as what it was in 2010,
when the median net worth of U.S. households was $82,300 (values
expressed in 2013 dollars).
The stability in household wealth follows a
dramatic drop during the Great Recession. From 2007 to 2010, the median
net worth of American families decreased by 39.4%, from $135,700 to
$82,300. Rapidly plunging house prices and a stock market crash were the
immediate contributors to this shellacking.
Our analysis of Federal Reserve data does
reveal a stark divide in the experiences of white, black and Hispanic
households during the economic recovery. From 2010 to 2013, the median
wealth of non-Hispanic white households increased from $138,600 to
$141,900, or by 2.4%.
Meanwhile,
the median wealth of non-Hispanic black households fell 33.7%, from
$16,600 in 2010 to $11,000 in 2013. Among Hispanics, median wealth
decreased by 14.3%, from $16,000 to $13,700. For all families — white,
black and Hispanic — median wealth is still less than its pre-recession
level.
A number of factors seem responsible for the widening of the wealth gaps during the economic recovery. As the
Federal Reserve notes,
the median income of minority households (blacks, Hispanics and other
non-whites combined) fell 9% from its 2010 to 2013 surveys, compared
with a decrease of 1% for non-Hispanic white households. Thus, minority
households may not have replenished their savings as much as white
households or they may have had to draw down their savings even more
during the recovery.
Also, financial assets, such as stocks,
have recovered in value more quickly than housing since the recession
ended. White households are much
more likely
than minority households to own stocks directly or indirectly through
retirement accounts. Thus, they were in better position to benefit from
the recovery in financial markets.
All American households since the recovery
have started to reduce their ownership of key assets, such as homes,
stocks and business equity. But the decrease in asset ownership tended
to be proportionally greater among minority households. For example, the
homeownership rate for non-Hispanic white households fell from 75.3% in
2010 to 73.9% in 2013, a percentage drop of 2%. Meanwhile, the
homeownership rate among minority households decreased from 50.6% in
2010 to 47.4% in 2013, a slippage of 6.5%.
While the current wealth gaps are higher
than at the beginning of the recession, they are not at their highest
levels as recorded by the Fed’s survey. Peak values for the wealth
ratios were recorded in the 1989 survey — 17 for the white-to-black
ratio and 14 for the white-to-Hispanic ratio. But those values of the
ratios may be anomalies driven by
fluctuations in the wealth of the poorest —
those with net worth less than $500. Otherwise, the racial and ethnic
wealth gaps in 2013 are at or about their highest levels observed in the
30 years for which we have data.
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