Job seekers stand in line to attend the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. career fair held by the New York State Department of Labor. Credit: Reuters / Lucas Jackson

Job seekers stand in line to attend the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. career fair held by the New York State Department of Labor.
Credit: Reuters / Lucas Jackson

If current economic trends continue, the average black household will need 228 years to accumulate as much wealth as their white counterparts hold today. For the average Latino family, it will take 84 years. Absent significant policy interventions, or a seismic change in the American economy, people of color will never close the gap.

Those are the key findings of a new study of the racial wealth-gap released this week by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) and the Corporation For Economic Development (CFED). They looked at trends in household wealth from 1983 to 2013—a 30-year period that captured the rise of Reaganomics, expanded international trade and two major financial crashes fueled by bubbles […]

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