Paving Different Paths to the Desired Result
In 2013, I was teaching cross multiplication to my Algebra II students when I noticed one child getting frustrated at how I did…
Addressing the wealth gap at the household level by increasing incomes, building assets, and reducing debt.
It’s about leveraging opportunities over the course of a lifetime—from paying for a college education to buying a house and saving for retirement—that allow individuals and families to build assets, have financial security, and pass wealth along to the next generation.
Research shows that homeownership and entrepreneurship are the building blocks of wealth generation for households of color. In fact, homeownership is the single largest source of wealth for Black and Latine families in the Chicago region, and the median net worth of Black entrepreneurs is 12 times that of peers who don’t own a business.
However, historically and to this day, people of color have encountered barriers to accessing the tools to become homeowners and business owners. To close the wealth gap at the household level, we must address the policies and practices that have expanded opportunities for white families to generate wealth while excluding Black and Latine families.
The Trust’s Growing Household Wealth strategy is organized around this simple equation: income plus assets, minus debt, equals wealth.
Chicago Color of Wealth Study
Chicagoland Workforce Funder Alliance
Coalitions for Equity in Wealth Policy
The racial and ethnic wealth gap is pervasive, affecting people across income and education levels. Recognizing how critical it is for families to stabilize their income—and that such stability often comes through educational attainment—the Trust supports organizations and initiatives that translate income, education, and work, into wealth. Some examples of this include affordable post-secondary options and entrepreneurship.
From redlining and contract buying to predatory lending, Chicago has a uniquely troubled history of perfecting discriminatory practices that prevent people of color from building wealth via homeownership and entrepreneurship. The Trust supports equitable opportunities for people of color to grow their own businesses and purchase and sustain homes as key tools for generating wealth.
Because communities of color lack access to capital, they’re often victims of predatory practices such as payday lending. Before recent Illinois legislation capped the payday lending rate at 36 percent, the average APR on a payday loan was 297 percent—a shockingly high rate that helped keep people of color trapped in debt cycles. The Trust supports efforts to regulate predatory lending through research, advocacy, and the promotion of safe alternative lending and banking products. We also support work to reform other inequitable policies, such as punitive municipal fines and fees.
The racial and ethnic wealth gap is pervasive, affecting people across income and education levels. Recognizing how critical it is for families to stabilize their income—and that such stability often comes through educational attainment—the Trust supports organizations and initiatives that translate income, education, and work, into wealth. Some examples of this include affordable post-secondary options and entrepreneurship.
From redlining and contract buying to predatory lending, Chicago has a uniquely troubled history of perfecting discriminatory practices that prevent people of color from building wealth via homeownership and entrepreneurship. The Trust supports equitable opportunities for people of color to grow their own businesses and purchase and sustain homes as key tools for generating wealth.
Because communities of color lack access to capital, they’re often victims of predatory practices such as payday lending. Before recent Illinois legislation capped the payday lending rate at 36 percent, the average APR on a payday loan was 297 percent—a shockingly high rate that helped keep people of color trapped in debt cycles. The Trust supports efforts to regulate predatory lending through research, advocacy, and the promotion of safe alternative lending and banking products. We also support work to reform other inequitable policies, such as punitive municipal fines and fees.
Household Wealth
In 2013, I was teaching cross multiplication to my Algebra II students when I noticed one child getting frustrated at how I did…
The quality of our lives is tied to the financial health of our household—from our ability to pay bills on time, to afford…
Homeownership is one of the most important vehicles for building household wealth, creating a pathway for families to increase their economic security, and…
As the recognition of the racial and ethnic wealth gap has grown, worker cooperatives have emerged as a promising strategy to close the…
Homeownership is the single largest source of household wealth in the Chicago region, and it also plays an important role in building flourishing…
I grew up on the South Side of Chicago in the Auburn Gresham neighborhood. It was and still is a predominately Black community.…
Please contact Shandra Richardson, Program Director for Strategic Initiatives, at srichardson@cct.org, or Adele Nandan, Director of Donor Engagement, at anandan@cct.org.