How Racial Animus Has Locked HBCUs Out of Capital Markets

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How Racial Animus Has Locked HBCUs Out of Capital Markets

3 Jun 2024

In a 1993 essay, Milton Friedman declared that one of the virtues of the free market system was its non-consideration of one’s color or religion.1 The only thing that ultimately matters is the quality of a good or service. Therefore, participants in any free market should expect that their participation in the market would not be hindered by factors outside their control, such as race. Yet historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) face just such a set of obstacles, and in a marketplace which, while little discussed beyond specialist circles, harbors funding resources that HBCUs simply cannot do without.

Authors

Jordan Nellums

Published in
United States of America

Table of Contents