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Big Bank CEOs Want to ‘Listen’ to Black Communities. They Should Return Their Stolen Wealth Instead.

Fox News triggered legitimate outrage last week with a graphic showing that the stock market rose after the uprisings that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr, the acquittal of Rodney King’s attackers, and the murders of Michael Brown and George Floyd. But Fox performed a public service, too, by revealing an underlying truth about our financialized economy: When it comes to profits, Black lives and Black pain don’t matter at all. In fact, they’re often good for business.

Nowhere, perhaps, is that truer than on Wall Street. Bank CEOs have been espousing a limited form of anti-racism lately, while studiously ignoring their own institutions’ record of exploiting African Americans. Instead of confronting systemic or institutional racism—a concept the mainstream media is still struggling to understand—they say they’re listening to personal stories of discrimination and marginalization.

American elites have been promising to “listen” to Black America for fifty years. Lyndon Johnson promised to listen when he convened a commission on racial injustice in 1967. Bill Clinton promised to listen in 1997 when he said he would lead “a great and unprecedented conversation about race.” Virginia Governor Ralph Northam promised to listen when pictures of him in blackface became public.

Whenever things get a little hot, they promise to listen.

Structural Violence

By all means, those of us who are white should educate ourselves about pervasive racism. But these bank CEOs, like many of us in white America, are eliding the distinction between two very distinct forms of racism.

“If Wall Street really cared about racial justice it would stop profiteering from institutional racism, and it would return the wealth it has extracted from Black communities. Those communities could then decide how to spend their wealth.”

As Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael) and Charles V. Hamilton wrote in their 1967 book, Black Power: The Politics of Liberation:

“When a black family moves into a home in a white neighborhood and is stoned, burned or routed out, they are victims of an overt act of individual racism which most people will condemn. But it is institutional racism that keeps black people locked in dilapidated slum tenements, subject to the daily prey of exploitative slumlords, merchants, loan sharks and discriminatory real estate agents.” (emphases mine)

Ture and Hamilton observed that individual racism “can be recorded by television cameras,” but that the more subtle and “less overt” forms of institutional racism are “no less destructive of human life.”

This has proven true in many areas of the American economy, including the banking sector. 

Listening Detour

In a series of recent statements, Dimon and his fellow CEOs focused on individual racism—even though Black Lives Matter activists have issued a policy agenda that also addresses systemic racism. The CEOs promised to foster diversity and inclusion in their workforces (hardly a major concession, since their websites and annual statements already pledge to do that.) But what they did, more than anything, was promise to “listen.”

Dimon said that “we are watching, listening and want every single one of you to know we are committed to fighting against racism and discrimination wherever and however it exists.”

Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf’s statement said, “part of our journey is about being able to listen to the experiences of others and having honest, open dialogue across differences.”

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said, “I have listened and learned from all of you, from our communities and, for the last ten years, from my colleagues on the board of the National Museum of African American History and Culture.”

Larry Fink of Blackrock said, “I want you to know that that the firm’s leadership stands with you, and we are listening.”

That’s a whole lot of listening, and not much doing.

Financial Racism

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Nowhere in that auditory orgy was there any clear acknowledgement of systemic racism or their own institutions’ role in it. Here’s a small selection, for starters:

JPMorgan Chase paid $55 million to settle charges that it engaged in discriminatory lending through third-party brokers that, according to the government’s lawsuit,  “has been intentional and willful, and has been implemented with reckless disregard of the rights of African-American and Hispanic borrowers.”

A 2015 study[1] looked at racial bias in lending by Wells Fargo in the city of Baltimore. It found that race-based loan differences cost African-American borrowers an additional $15,000 to $16,000 for a 30-year loan, and raised the percentage of foreclosed homes from approximately 10 percent to almost 18 percent. Wells Fargo’s biased practices cost the black communities of Baltimore more than $2 million in lost wealth.

Overall, a study of national lending patterns found that, “Compared to their white counterparts, people of color with similar socioeconomic status and creditworthiness are more likely to be either denied mortgages or steered towards high-cost ones.”[2]

There Goes the Neighborhood

Banks increasingly invested in real estate after the 2008 financial crisis, in what the New York Times called a “$60 billion housing grab.” Wall Street institutions profited off a crisis they created by sweeping up distressed properties.  Larry Fink’s Blackrock was one of those institutions. So was Brian Moynihan’s Bank of America. They’ve done well; their tenants, not so much.

Apparently, banks can be slumlords, too. A lawsuit against Bank of America and a property management firm alleges that they “intentionally failed to provide routine exterior maintenance … in working- and middle-class African American and Latino neighborhoods in 37 metropolitan areas, while they consistently maintained similar bank-owned homes in comparable white neighborhoods.”

The lawsuit, based on years of research, included more than 35,000 photos of “wildly overgrown grass and weeds, unsecured doors and windows, damaged steps and handrails, accumulated trash and debris, unsecured pools, graffiti, and even dead animals decaying in yards.”

And it’s not just an urban phenomenon. Discriminatory lending helped drive 1 million African-American families from their farms in Mississippi and elsewhere in the Deep South. Institutional investors have contributed to the displacement by turning farmland into an “asset class.”

These stories reflect only a small selection of Wall Street’s acts of financial wrongdoing against African Americans. Overall, predatory lending has devastated many African-American neighborhoods across the country, and the harms extend into other economic areas as well, from employment to food scarcity and health.

Talk is Cheap

If they really wanted to “listen,” the CEOs could start by listening to what the Kerner Commission had to say more than fifty years ago, when it pointed to “discriminatory consumer and credit practices” and “inadequate housing” as two of the critical issues facing Black America.

If Wall Street really cared about racial justice it would stop profiteering from institutional racism, and it would return the wealth it has extracted from Black communities. Those communities could then decide how to spend their wealth.

But history has shown us that this country’s elites won’t do anything they don’t have to do. As Frederick Douglass said, “Power concedes nothing without demand.”

Talk is cheap, and listening is even cheaper. Wall Street’s CEOs have had more than enough time to listen. Now is a time for action—if not from them, than from the people themselves.

[1] “Race, Space, and Cumulative Disadvantage: A Case Study of the Subprime Lending Collapse,”  Rugh, J, Albright, L.  and Masse, Dy Soc Probl. 2015 May 1; 62(2): 186–218.

[2]Faber, Jacob W. 2013. “Racial Dynamics of Subprime Mortgage Leading at the Peak.” Housing Policy Debate 23(2):328-349; Ross and Yinger 2002.

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