The ability to build Black wealth is under attack in America.

The War on Black Wealth: Employment, Equity, and the Erosion of Economic Freedom

Texas Policy & Power Institute (TPPI) | October 2025 Executive Summary

Across the United States, the economic stability of Black households is under direct threat. The most recent federal data shows a pattern of deepening employment inequality that mirrors the racial wealth gap itself. Black women—who are among the most educated and experienced workers in America—face rising unemployment rates even as other groups see improvement or stability. Black men, meanwhile, continue to endure some of the highest jobless rates of any demographic.

This is not an accident of the market. It reflects a deliberate policy environment that has prioritized “race neutrality” at the expense of racial equity, dismantled safeguards that once sought fairness, and reinforced systems of exclusion in both public and private sectors. The result is a renewed War on Black Wealth—a modern campaign that restricts access to opportunity, suppresses mobility, and pushes Black families further into economic precarity during one of the most expensive cost-of-living periods in modern history.

 

  1. The Data: A Picture of Decline

Over the past ten months (Nov 2024–Aug 2025), unemployment among Black women rose from 5.9% to 6.7%, while unemployment among white women remained nearly flat at 3.2%. Hispanic women’s unemployment hovered around 4.5–5.0%, and Asian workers overall remained near 3.5%.

Black men faced an even steeper climb. Their jobless rate jumped from 6.0% to 7.1%, while white men stayed below 3.7% for the same period. This means that Black men are almost twice as likely to be unemployed as white men—a ratio that has persisted for decades, regardless of education level or labor market conditions. What makes this moment distinct is timing. These disparities are growing during a period of supposed economic recovery, when national unemployment rates are near record lows and corporate profits are high. The gains of this economy have not been shared. They have been allocated away from the very communities that most need relief.
  1. Historical Context: A Familiar Pattern
This is not new. Every major downturn or shift in U.S. economic policy—from the post-Reconstruction South to the Reagan-era recessions to the Great Recession—has widened the gap between Black and white employment. Historically, Black workers have been the first fired and the last rehired. During periods of inflation and austerity, government programs that could stabilize Black families, such as targeted hiring initiatives, federal workforce training, or small business credit, have been reduced or reclassified under “race-neutral” guidelines. This language has allowed discrimination to continue behind a façade of fairness. In the corporate sector, diversity hiring commitments announced after 2020 have quietly evaporated, while layoffs in technology, education, and healthcare have disproportionately affected Black professionals and women of color. The pattern is deliberate and structural:
  • Government policy: Weak enforcement of Title VII, underfunded civil rights agencies, and the rollback of affirmative action in federal contracting.
  • Corporate retreat: Reversal of DEI pledges, shrinking budgets for equity programs, and tokenism without structural change.
  • Private market bias: Algorithmic screening and hiring systems that reproduce racial bias in automated form.
These levers combine to depress Black employment, suppress wages, and constrict access to credit, ownership, and advancement.
  1. The Real-World Consequences

Behind these statistics are real lives and real losses.

Black families already spend a higher proportion of their income on basic needs like food, housing, and transportation. When unemployment spikes among Black workers, the consequences ripple through every aspect of daily survival:
  • Rising debt: Families fall behind on credit cards, car payments, and student loans, leading to higher interest rates and damaged credit scores.
  • Housing insecurity: Job loss often precedes eviction or foreclosure. With housing prices and rents at historic highs, even short gaps in income can mean permanent displacement.
  • Reduced mobility: Without stable work, Black workers lose access to employer-sponsored healthcare, retirement benefits, and career advancement.
  • Wealth erosion: Job loss means fewer contributions to savings, home equity, and intergenerational transfers—the foundations of wealth that protect white families from economic shocks.
The cumulative effect is devastating. During times of inflation, when prices for groceries, fuel, and utilities surge, the lack of consistent income forces Black families to stretch thinner and rely more on credit. Each missed payment compounds disadvantage. What looks like a temporary employment gap becomes a multi-generational setback.
  1. Intentionality and Policy: The War on Black Wealth
To call this a coincidence is to ignore the data. The same federal agencies that monitor employment and inflation are aware of these disparities, yet few have acted. Federal relief programs have increasingly moved toward “colorblind” criteria, which in practice favor those with pre-existing access to capital and networks—groups that are overwhelmingly white. Policies that once sought to correct systemic imbalance are being recast as “unfair advantages,” leaving Black workers unprotected. When government leaders refuse to recognize race as a meaningful economic factor, they guarantee that racial inequality will persist. It is intentional by design and deliberate in outcome. The message is clear: Black labor is still expendable, and Black prosperity is still negotiable. This is the essence of the War on Black Wealth—a quiet but coordinated dismantling of the progress made through civil rights, labor equity, and affirmative action. It is being waged through bureaucracy, data manipulation, and omission.
  1. The Role of Progressive Leadership
Progressive policymakers and thinkers must lead the counteroffensive. Economic justice is not a partisan ideal, it is a democratic imperative. TPPI calls for a new framework that centers racial equity as economic policy, not as moral aspiration. This includes:
  1. Targeted federal employment programs that specifically address racial gaps in hiring and wages.
  2. Restoration of affirmative action principles in contracting, education, and federal workforce pipelines.
  3. Transparency mandates requiring companies to report pay, promotion, and layoff data by race and gender.
  4. Expansion of community banking and credit access to counter predatory lending.
  5. Investment in childcare, healthcare, and education that reduces the invisible labor burden borne by Black women.
Progressive leadership must articulate that fairness does not mean sameness. Equity means removing barriers for those who have carried the burden of inequity for generations, grossly without compensation.
  1. The Cost of Inaction

Ignoring these disparities will have lasting national consequences. When millions of capable, educated Black workers are sidelined, the entire economy suffers.

  • Consumer spending declines.
  • Tax revenue falls.
  • Innovation slows.
  • Public safety and social stability erode.
Every percentage point increase in Black unemployment translates into billions lost in GDP. Yet policymakers continue to view this crisis as peripheral instead of central. It is not only a racial issue, it is a national one.
  1. A Call to Action

The Texas Policy & Power Institute urges voters, advocates, and allies to demand accountability. Elect leaders who understand that Black employment is economic stability. Hold corporations to their promises. Support policies that make racial equity a measurable outcome, not a talking point.

Black Americans have shown resilience through centuries of economic sabotage. But resilience should not be mistaken for consent. The fight for fair employment, equal pay, and wealth creation is not charity, it is justice.

This is not just about jobs. It is about power, dignity, and the right to thrive.

About TPPI

The Texas Progressive Policy Institute (TPPI) is a progressive research and advocacy organization committed to advancing equitable policy solutions that strengthen democracy, protect working families, and promote inclusive economic growth.