cover image: Closing the Racial Wealth Gap: A Counterfactual Historical Simulation of Universal Inheritance

20.500.12592/98sffqw

Closing the Racial Wealth Gap: A Counterfactual Historical Simulation of Universal Inheritance

1 Jun 2024

Since the end of the civil rights movement, the United States has not made meaningful progress toward closing the racial wealth gap. Without deliberate policy intervention, this gap will likely persist. Racial justice activists and policymakers, aiming in part to close this gap, have put forth various reparations programs. Others have proposed race-neutral wealth redistribution policies that also promise to address the gap, but as an indirect consequence of redistributing wealth in general. The potential impact of this second set of proposals on racial wealth inequality remains understudied. This article addresses this deficit through counterfactual historical simulation: By assessing the thirty-year impact of these race-neutral proposals, it finds significant reductions in the racial wealth gap over a generation. Yet these race-neutral programs have limitations vis-à-vis the broader goals of racial justice; this article concludes by emphasizing the unique capacities of reparations programs to address these limitations.
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Authors

Asher Dvir-Djerassi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.3.04
ISBN
2377-8253 2377-8261
Published in
United States of America
Rights
© 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. Dvir-Djerassi, Asher. 2024. “Closing the Racial Wealth Gap: A Counterfactual Historical Simulation of Universal Inheritance.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(3): 70–91. https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.3.04. This research was conducted with support from the Stone Center for Inequality Dynamics and a Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development training grant to the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan (T32HD007339). The author thanks Davis Daumler for invaluable assistance with the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. The content is solely the responsibility of the author and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Direct correspondence to: Asher Dvir-Djerassi, at asherd@umich.edu, Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, LSA Building, 500 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1382, United States.