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Wealth Inequality in Black and White: Cultural and Structural Sources of the Racial Wealth Gap
Cedric Herring
Wealth Inequality in Black and White: Cultural and Structural Sources of the Racial Wealth Gap
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Race and Social Problems ISSN 1867-1748 Volume 8 Number 1 Race Soc Probl (2016) 8:4-17 DOI 10.1007/s12552-016-9159-8
Wealth Inequality in Black and White: Cultural and Structural Sources of the Racial Wealth Gap
Cedric Herring & Loren Henderson
Wealth Inequality in Black and White: Cultural and Structural
Sources of the Racial Wealth Gap
Cedric Herring 1
Loren Henderson 1
Published online: 10 February 2016 ? Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016
Abstract Using data from the 2013 Survey of Consumer
Finances, this research examines competing and comple-
mentary cultural and structural explanations of the sources
of racial differences in wealth. We use OLS regression and
quantile regression to identify the major individual-level
sources of wealth differences between African Americans
and whites. Whites have more favorable wealth charac-
teristics than do African Americans on all of the variables
in the analysis: gender of household head, bankruptcies,
spending patterns, stock ownership, business ownership,
home ownership, inheritance, educational attainment,
income, occupation, age, and number of children. Cultural
factors, having a female-headed family, spending patterns,
and inheritance account for little of the racial wealth gap.
Racial differences in income, stock ownership, and busi-
ness ownership account for much of the explained racial
wealth gap. Moreover, compared with whites, African
Americans receive significantly lower wealth returns to
education, age, income, stock ownership, and business
ownership. We discuss the implications of our findings.
Keywords Racial inequality ? Wealth inequality ? Racial
wealth gap ? Net worth and race
Several studies have documented racial and ethnic differ-
ences in wealth ownership (Parcel 1982; Horton 1992;
Oliver and Shapiro 2006; Lewin-Epstein et al. 1997;
Conley 1999; Keister 2000a, b; Avery and Rendall 2002;
Shapiro 2004; Semyonov and Lewin-Epstein 2011, 2013).
Although researchers agree that there are extreme and
persistent racial differences in wealth, the reality of the
ever-increasing wealth gap in the USA has spawned
scholarly debates about the root causes of this phenomenon
(e.g., Massey and Denton 1993; Oliver and Shapiro 1995;
Conley 1999; Keister and Moller 2000; Shapiro et al. 2013;
Sullivan et al. 2015). Indeed, there are now competing
explanations in the race-class debate concerning wealth
accumulation and inequality. Some scholars have taken the
view that racial differences in wealth are primarily the
result of differences in cultural and behavioral factors such
as familial patterns, amounts of self-control, willingness to
delay gratification, and investment and consumption pat-
terns (e.g., Lewis 1963; Wilson 1987; Brimmer 1988;
Keister and Moller 2
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