By
Ken Alltucker
The Cincinnati Enquirer
The
paychecks of black Ohioans shrank during the prosperous 1990s,
a decade in which white workers had modest wage gains, a new
report released today shows.
Policy Matters Ohio, a Cleveland-based think tank, said the
typical black worker in Ohio earned a median wage of $10.91 an
hour in 2001, a 2.1 percent decline from 1989 when adjusted
for inflation. But hourly wages for white workers inched up
3.8 percent to $13.17 over the same time period.
The wage gap between blacks and whites narrows some, but
not entirely, when similar education levels are compared. For
example, white high school graduates earn $2 more an hour
($12) than black high school graduates ($10).
The report is largely based on an annual Census Bureau
survey of 50,000 households nationwide. It doesn't have any
information for Cincinnati or other Ohio cities, nor does it
include data on other races.
Amy Hanauer, executive director of Policy Matters, said the
decline of Ohio's smokestack economy and its largest cities
are two of the main factors that account for the wage
difference.
"It Ohio, it's really a story of the manufacturing job
loss," she said.
Ohio was one of the best states for black workers more than
two decades ago. The typical Ohio black man's wage in 1979 was
$15.32 an hour, 30 percent more than the U.S. median wage for
black men. The median wage for African-American men in Ohio
has since plummeted 21.7 percent to $12 an hour.
The figures aren't a surprise to Jim Clingman, former
president of the African-American Chamber of Commerce in
Cincinnati.
He said the wage disparity - as well as other issues such
as police-community relations and discrimination - could
persuade some young educated African-American workers to seek
employment elsewhere.
"A lot of young people would be more inclined to leave
(Cincinnati) because of that," Mr. Clingman said. "They may
want to go somewhere to get top dollar for their education and
skills."
The report also claims that:
Black workers (28.8 percent) were more likely than white
workers (21.9 percent) to earn a poverty wage of $8.63 an hour
or less. Yet poverty wages among both black and white workers
have risen since 1979 levels.
African-Americans with a four-year degree earned a median
wage of $16 an hour in 2001, or $4 less than their white
counterparts. Yet among the least educated, race is less of a
factor for earning potential. Black high school dropouts
earned $8.32 an hour versus $8.30 an hour for white high
school dropouts.
E-mail kalltucker@enquirer.com
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