Why Microsoft Is Investing In Black-Owned Banks - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

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Big banks and major corporations like Yelp, Netflix and Microsoft announced major
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investments in black owned banks.
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Well, black banks have gained an additional $1.5 billion in lending power since the death of
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George Floyd, created by a $150 million increase in equity c
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apital. These banks attempt to help the so-called banking deserts, or typically minority
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neighborhoods where brick and mortar banks are far and few between.
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You know, in a perfect world, you wouldn't have the racial wealth gap, and so you wouldn't have the
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discrimination that created black-owned banks in the first place.
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People of color African-Americans in this conversation were
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historically barred from accessing financial goods and financial
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services.
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Discrimination is still there, but it just looks differently.
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It's not as blatant. It's not just on face value, but there are other things like credit
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scores,
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And the black bank really kind of emerged as a way of meeting some of
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those needs.
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Black owned banks are so critical when it comes to supporting r
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acial equity initiatives and the black and African-American community.
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Black banks are far from thriving.
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Americans who identify solely as black or African-American make up
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13.4% of the U.S. population today, but less than one percent of all FDIC insured
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banks are considered black owned.
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Are black banks struggling? Yes, the banks reflects the community in which they are in.
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So whatever the struggles are of the community, the banks have the same struggle because
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they're enmeshed in that community.
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They cannot change it unless the community itself has more wealth.
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So why are black owned banks key to ending racial disparity in America?
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And what do they need to succeed?
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The history of banking in America is riddled with incidences of systematic racism.
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Terms like redlining originate from banking practices that segregated populations of color by
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denying loans for housing.
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While the federal government eventually stepped in to resolve financial discrimination with legislation
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like the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977,
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experts say that the banking industry still has a race problem.
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The country has a race problem, one that is rooted in wealth and power, which are
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largely synonymous.
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Nowhere are decisions about who gains and controls wealth more concentrated
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than in the banking and finance sector.
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We are not far away from the subprime crisis where Wall Street went to target
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black and brown communities with their worst loans.
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The people who were sold a subprime loan could have been eligible for a prime loan.
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The financial crisis wiped out about 53% of the wealth in the black communities,
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and that's wealth that hasn't been recovered.
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I think we still see problems that are inherently baked into how we decide who gets loans or
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baked into how we invest in community.
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Redlining is still there.
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Green lining is still there because most of the regulations, having been one is focused around the
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fiduciary duty and the stability of the bank, not how they act in the
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community.
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Accessibility is a big issue.
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Black neighborhoods have seen a disproportionate number of bank branch closures compared to white
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neighborhoods. Between 2010 and 2018, the number of banks in majority black
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neighborhoods decreased by 14.6%.
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The disparity is even starker for major companies like JPMorgan and Bank of America.
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JPMorgan decreased its branches in majority black areas by 22.8%,
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compared to a net decline of just 0.2% in the rest of the U.S.
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For Bank of America, it was 29.1%, compared to
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18.4% in non majority black neighborhoods.
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In total, JPMorgan closed fifty five branches and Bank of America closed ninety
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five branches in majority black areas within the span of eight years.
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When asked for comment, JPMorgan replied that as part of their $30 billion commitment to addressing
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racial equity, they've opened new branches in black, Hispanic and Latino neighborhoods and offer
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free financial health and home buying workshops.
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Bank of America said that 36% of its financial centers are now located in majority
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minority neighborhoods, with $1.25 billion invested in advancing
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racial equality and economic opportunity.
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None of us are above having to go to a local bank once in a while to make deposits
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to take out cash
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And it's void. Oftentimes, what we'll see is one of two things either we will see no
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availability to liquidity that is that there's no other place for people of
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color to actually access their money or.
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And just as perversely, we'll see higher prices for that liquidity, that is that
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we'll see higher interest rates even, you know, in excess of, say, 20
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% or 30% in order to actually access money.
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Researchers have also shown that discrimination in loan denial and cost have not declined
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over the years in spite of regulations that were designed to prevent them.
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It is legal because of how we have defined risk tolerance, our interest rates or charge.
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It's legal for myself to be charged more than my white peer.
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And so I think that discrimination is still there, but it just looks differently.
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It's not as blatant. It's not just on face value, but there are other things like credit
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scores that people use or geographic location or asset
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value of your home.
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The way that race has been used to provide
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subsidies for some communities and not other communities, and the way that discrimination works
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insidiously has affected so profoundly black homeownership,
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which is much lower than white homeownership.
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Black wealth accumulation, which is 12 to 1, 10 to 1,
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regardless of income, and that is 100% on account of these
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racist credit policies and home ownership.
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That's where black-owned banks come in.
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Banks and credit unions must be federally designated as a minority depository institution
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by the FDIC to qualify as being black owned.
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MDIs Must either have 51% or more of their shares owned by minority
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individuals or a majority of its board members are minorities, and the community that
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it serves is predominantly minority as well.
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As of 2021, there are 146 minority depository institutions in
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America. 20 of them qualify as being black or African-American owned.
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It allows people to have a certification and legitimately, one,
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signal to the larger community, they are there to help them; Two, really put some guardrails
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because these institutions, particularly much like CDFIs, are designed to serve communities that have
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been historically overlooked and underserved.
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So I would say the benefit of that certification is giving visibility to those folks.
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And I think it's also kind of elevated the fact that that institutions and certainly the federal
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government believes that MDIs have a vital role in society
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Besides this designation.
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Black owned banks work very similarly to traditional banks.
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They provide mortgages, loans and insured bank accounts.
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What does make them unique is their mission to bring equality to banking,
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providing affordable financial services and education to people that need it the most.
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When a bank has a branch in a community, people are more likely to
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get access to financial institutions and black banks.
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Black credit unions are more likely to locate in black communities.
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From a business decision, I completely understand if you follow the negative data that exist about us, why
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would a bank come? But obviously that's when the presence of black banks realized "No no no, I
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don't believe everything I read, and I see that there's massive home ownership from
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prior grandparents.
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I see that people are going to work every day."
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Black owned banks also support the economic life of the communities they serve by providing
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much needed loans for small businesses, nonprofits and black homebuyers.
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We found that in the aftermath of the Great Recession, that black banks on average actually
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expanded their mortgage credit access at a time in which
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arguably many financial institutions were actually fleeing the lending space.
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But I think the second part is, you know, we're beginning to hear anecdotes encouragingly that
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black banks are beginning to look to develop what are called special purpose credit facilities.
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These types of facilities will give more flexibility to all institutions,
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but including black banks that will allow them to provide credit to people who
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have been demonstrated to have been historically disadvantaged or communities that have been
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historically disadvantaged.
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The number of black owned banks has dwindled immensely over the years.
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Are black banks struggling?
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Yes, the banks reflects the community in which they are in.
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So whatever the struggles are of the community, the banks have the same struggle because
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they're enmeshed in that community.
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They cannot change it unless the community itself has more wealth and
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has more access and and we have less discrimination as a society.
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Between 1888 and 1934, there were 134 black owned banks to
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help the black community.
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Today, there are only 20 black owned banks that qualify as minority depository
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institutions, while people who identify as solely black or African-American
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make up 13.4% percent of the U.S.
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population, black owned banks consist of less than 1% of all FDIC
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insured banks in the United States.
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I think part of it has to do with the broader trend in the banking community.
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That is that overall we're seeing the number of banks overall declining and assets being
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concentrated, particularly in your larger global and more
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complex financial institutions.
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Black owned banks still lack the assets needed to compete against major players.
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One United bank manages over $650 million in assets as the
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biggest black owned bank in America.
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In comparison, JPMorgan and Bank of America each managed asset portfolios that are
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worth well over $2 trillion dollars.
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So the size of assets really determines what they're able to do from a lending and investment perspective,
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which then, of course, drives how innovative they can be.
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It talks about leads to margins in the bank and how many people can show up and what's the staffing
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look like and all of those kinds of things.
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And obviously, it's a big regulatory marker that people look on.
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There's a stability and health of the institution.
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To combat these concerns.
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Several big banks and corporations have invested heavily in black owned banks following the death of
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George Floyd. More recently, Microsoft and Truist Financial backed
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fdic's new fund to invest in minority owned banks, each putting in tens of
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millions of dollars to help its launch
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With Microsoft's impact investments, we always evaluate
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investments on impact first, then risk than return.
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So really, the driver here is what impact can we drive?
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The FDIC and Truist have been critical partners in driving this
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forward for mission driven bank.
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Most experts remain cautiously optimistic about the recent investments made to black owned
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banks, but agree that there is still work to be done.
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I think every corporation needs to look inside their own
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practices and see where they can themselves remedy some of the
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historic wrongs that they have done.
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So it is great news when I hear about big banks and big corporations saying We're going to
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donate into black owned banks.
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A better way to get access would be to look at the way that their institution has helped
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propagate has helped perpetuate the racial wealth gap.
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And to fix. To repair.
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To apologize for.
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But what's most important to the survival and success of black owned banks is the support and
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attention from average consumers.
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I can't imagine that this country would want to lose and minimize our opportunity to create
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wealth for ourselves and for the communities around us.
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And with the demographic shifts and recognizing that I call black and brown people the new
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majority, we're the fastest growing segment of the population.
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Maybe take it down to businesses.
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Black women are the fastest growing entrepreneurs in this country.
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Not the same rate, but they're there.
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So from a quantitative perspective, I think everybody in this country should begin to care about black
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communities because we are indeed taking over in a good way.
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States have already flipped where black and brown people are the majority.
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And so as you think about the long term economic viability and competition, it's
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important that we invest.