The Growth of Black Wealth and Income in the United States

African Americans have seen much adversity throughout US history, but also significant economic progress. One way to measure economic progress is by looking at wealth. There is a fantastic paper by Derenoncourt and co-authors recently published titled “Wealth of Two Nations: The U.S. Racial Wealth Gap, 1860–2020” which puts together the best historical data on Black and White wealth in the US.

The paper primarily focuses on wealth inequality, and here it paints a pessimistic picture since 1950: while the racial wealth gap was closing up until 1950, it stalled after that, and possibly got worse after the 1980s. But using that same data, we can focus on the growth of Black wealth, and here the results are quite optimistic: inflation-adjusted Black wealth per capita was about 7 times larger in 2019 than it was in 1950. Black wealth per capita has roughly doubled since from about 1992 to 2019 (inflation adjusted).

Here’s the long-run data in a chart, which shows that in 2019 Black wealth per capita was 86 times greater than in 1870 (inflation adjusted). That’s some real economic progress!

For income data, there is no long-run historical series similar to the wealth series that I am aware of, but there are estimates for particular years. For example, Robert Margo estimates that Black income per capita was about $1,500 in 1870 (inflation adjusted to 2022 dollars) and $2,400 in 1900 (once again, inflation adjusted to 2022). Margo says that these data should be comparable to the Census CPS Historical Income tables, and the 2022 estimate from this series is $31,180 for Blacks. This data suggests that Black per capita income is 21 times was it was in 1870, and about 3 times what it was in 1967 (first year in the Census CPS series).

Using the same census data for families, rather than individuals, we can also look at the growth of Black family income since 1967. This data suggests that both median and mean family income for Blacks roughly doubled in inflation-adjusted terms from 1967 to 2022, which isn’t as impressive as the tripling of per capita income, but keep in mind that families are smaller today than in 1967. When we look at the distribution of those incomes, the progress becomes very clear:

In 1967, half of Black families had incomes under $35,000 (in 2022 inflation-adjusted dollars), which is close to the official definition of poverty (depending on family size). By 2022, this had been cut in half: just 25 percent of Black families were under $35,000.

The number of “rich” Black families (incomes of at least $100,000) in 1967 was miniscule: only about 200,000 families, just 5 percent of the total. In 2022, there were an additional 3 million rich Black families, now comprising almost one-third of the total, and outnumbering poor Black families. The number of rich Black families has grown by about 1 million in just the past decade — no stagnation there! The Black “middle class” (incomes between $35,000 and $100,000) now has 4.5 million families — the same number as the total count of Black families in 1967.

Of course, there is still much work to be done on economic progress in the US. But the astonishing economic progress of Blacks since emancipation and since the Civil Rights era is worth celebrating, even if racial gaps haven’t closed much recently.

One thought on “The Growth of Black Wealth and Income in the United States

  1. Rick Badman's avatar Rick Badman December 16, 2025 / 12:43 am

    Since so many Blacks want reparations and reparations is to be paid to replace what they could have earned, they should be given what they would have earned had their ancestors never left Africa. Someone should ask Joy Reed if she could have earned more if she lived in Africa than what she is earning in America. Better yet, she should be asked if she would like to be in Africa now since she would be there if her ancestors had never been brought to America.

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