Why Black-Owned Businesses Don鈥檛 Survive - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

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Since the coronavirus outbreak was declared a pandemic, hundreds of thousands of businesses
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have been forced to shut their doors.
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Some, permanently.
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Entrepreneurs across America have had to face the uncertainty of the worst economic
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crisis in decades.
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While minority-owned businesses have been disproportionately affected, Black-owned businesses
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suffered the most, declining by twice the rate of White-owned businesses.
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Systemic problems surrounding the economic gap aren't new.
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African-American owned firms have historically struggled to get started and stay
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afloat. Getting approved for loans and receiving federal support can be nearly
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impossible for many.
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From 2007 to 2017, more than half of Black-owned companies got turned
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down for loans, a rate twice as high as White-owned businesses, according to the Federal Reserve.
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In the summer of 2020, the murder of George Floyd sparked a renewed interest in the
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economic advancement of black people.
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Businesses owned by people across the African diaspora saw huge surges in sales as
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people poured out in support.
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It was very bittersweet for me because almost immediately I saw a surge in
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sales during that time last summer.
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And so there was this part of me that was extremely excited to see,
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you know, so much support.
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On the other hand, it was very saddening that it had to come off of
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the heels of someone dying.
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So why do Black entrepreneurs continue to lag behind Whites and other minority
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groups in terms of market share?
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And what will it take to keep them in business?
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It can be difficult for any business to succeed, but Black entrepreneurs have historically faced
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unique challenges.
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Congress passed the Freedmen's Bureau Act in 1865, awarding compensation
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to freed slaves in the form of 40 acres and a mule.
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After President Lincoln's assassination, this bill meantto help freed slaves gained financial
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stability, was rescinded.
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The legacy of slavery and Jim Crow left African-Americans at a lasting economic
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disadvantage. Without an equal footing, poverty continued to cycle through descendants of those
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slaves, creating a long history of wealth inequality.
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What you see is that the median level, or the kind of fiftieth ranked White family in the US
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has $170,000 in their net worth.
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When you compare that to the average Black family in the US, what you see is that same comparable black
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family has $10,000.
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So these levels of inequality, you can see business ownership or business success is
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kind of at that high end where we see just enormous amounts of inequality, especially when we start looking
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at revenues or employment size or the scale of the business.
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While America has a long history of Black entrepreneurship, it also has a history of racism
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and violence that systematically undermined efforts of African-Americans to get ahead in the
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business world. Several exclusively Black communities were home to thriving businesses and the
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post reconstruction era.
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The Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma, became widely recognized as a Black Wall Street,
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an affluent black community ripe with businesses, banks and educated
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professionals. But in June 1921, the entire town was bombed
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and burned to the ground by a white mob.
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What happens is that black businesses did not have the money to recover after they were
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targeted, after they were attacked, after were burned down to the ground and in the system of oppression, as
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well as these notions of fear.
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And so you have this desire, of course, to rebuild.
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But with what resources?
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So it wasn't just individuals who were targeting businesses.
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You have the cops who refused to protect these businesses.
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You had a judicial system that refused to prosecute.
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And so it really wasn't safe for African-Americans to continue to be entrepreneurs in this climate.
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The hope for Black wealth in America burned, stripping families of their opportunity to
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create generational wealth.
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Having a family background in business is really important.
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So, for example, if your parents are business owners, you're twice as likely to be a business owner yourself
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than someone who doesn't have parents that are business owners.
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Now, if you go back, you know, a generation or two generations, if you have low business ownership
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rates then, then it gets kind of passed along to future generations.
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And so that creates this kind of barrier that you don't have that family business experience.
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Real estate is one of the most common ways to build wealth in America.
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But discriminatory housing practices have historically kept Black Americans out of the game.
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Starting in the 1930s, the Federal Housing Administration refused to insure homes in
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African-American neighborhoods.
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This is known as redlining.
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What would be the reaction of the community to a Negro family moving in?
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Oh, I don't think they'd like it.
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Black people were kept out of the newly developing suburban neighborhoods and pushed into urban housing
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projects. Modern day redlining still exists.
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According to 2020 data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, Black applicants are denied
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mortgage loans at a rate 80 percent higher than white applicants.
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These events laid the groundwork for the increasing wealth gap in America.
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It is still more difficult for African-American entrepreneurs to get and stay in
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business. About 6.5 million businesses are launched in the United
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States each year.
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There are six different types of businesses to file under.
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Each of these defines how a company will handle taxes, liabilities, ownership and
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finances. There are 30.2 million small businesses in the U.S.
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They make up about 99 percent of all businesses, but only a fraction of them survive.
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20 percent of small-owned businesses fail by the first year, 30 percent by the second,
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50 percent by the fifth and by the tenth year, a staggering 70 percent of
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businesses have shut off their lights.
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Some of the most common challenges, though, that do precipitate a business closure relate
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to fundamental issues: lacking a firm business plan and a concrete
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business plan with real clear strategic direction and getting some of the
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fundamentals in place at the onset.
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For minorities, the numbers can be even more daunting.
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Eight out of 10 black owned businesses fail within the first 18 months.
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And despite making up 17.6 in 13.2 percent of the population,
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Hispanics and Blacks make up 5.8 and 2.1 of all employer businesses,
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or, in other words, businesses with paid employees.
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For reference, white employers make up 88 percent of overall sales and control
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86.5 percent of U.S.
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employment, according to the Small Business Administration.
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Lack of capital is the biggest challenge for African-American small business owners, and studies
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show that Black owned firms have weaker ties with banks.
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According to a 2019 survey by the New York Fed, fewer than one in 10 Black
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nonemployer firms have a recent relationship with the bank, compared with one in four
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White-owned non employer firms and less than 47 percent of financing
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applications filed by African-American business owners get approved.
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According to evidence from the survey, the discrepancies aren't due to Black entrepreneurs applying
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for financing at a lower rate.
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Black-owned firms applied for bank financing just as much as white-owned firms, if not more.
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28 percent of black-owned nonemployer firms applied for financing in
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2018, compared to 25 percent of white nonemployers.
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The difference? Black applicants are denied at a higher rate.
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It tend to be concentrated in industries that require less startup costs
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or less capital intensive.
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But on top of that, so that setback, has an impact as well on the
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ability to secure bank loans, lines of credit.
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Because, of course, in those cases, when you're an entrepreneur, you're starting out.
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What are you going to pledge?
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You're going to pledge your personal assets, whether it's your house or other type of collateral.
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And so if you're starting out where, you know, you're at a disadvantage there, that's going to create
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headwinds for you in securing external capital for yourbusiness.
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In the summer of 2020, a study by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition found a
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disparity in the way Black and White loan applicants were treated.
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The study highlights one example where a Black applicant was turned away for not having an account with
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the bank. That same bank encouraged a White applicant with a similar profile and credit
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history to open an account and offered to send PPP information.
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Fear plays a part to Federal Reserve Data shows that one in four black owned
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firms reported forgoing applying for credit, with 56 percent of those firms stating that
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they do not want to accrue debt.
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And 60 percent, indicating that they felt like they will be turned down if they applied.
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For a long period of time, I didn't even try to go to bank
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lenders because I knew that on file my application wouldn't be as strong as someone
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maybe who wasn't an entrepreneur who hadn't been in business for, you know, two years at the time or
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whatever. My application wasn't strong.
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And so I'm sure that lots of entrepreneurs go through that as well.
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COVID-19 has exacerbated some of the issues facing the black community.
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Black Americans are dying at a rate of three times that of White Americans.
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In addition to having a disproportionate death rate, African-American entrepreneurs have had to
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close their doors at more than twice the rate of their White counterparts.
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Black owners declined by 41 percent between February and April 2020,
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compared to 17 percent of White owners.
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As coronavirus continues, many Black business owners are pessimistic about being able to
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survive. A CNBC survey in July 2020 showed that only about half
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of minority small business owners believe their business can last for more than a year under current
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conditions. And the numbers prove that another shutdown would disproportionately affect Black
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owners. 58 percent of small business owners say they remained open to stay at home
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orders, but Black small business owners fall short at 47 percent.
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That is in part because Black entrepreneurs are overrepresented in industries that are most
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affected by stay-at-home orders.
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According to a report from McKinsey and Company, 40 percent of revenues from black-owned businesses
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are in the five most vulnerable sectors.
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That includes hospitality, retail and food service, compared to 25
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percent of revenues from all U.S.
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businesses. They also received less federal support, including the rescue loans
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provided through the Paycheck Protection Program.
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The administration has prioritized big businesses over small businesses
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and the American workers that Congress intended to protect.
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The administration needs to refocus the Paycheck Protection Program.
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Just 20 percent of PPP loans went to areas that had the highest concentration of
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Black-owned businesses, according to the New York Fed.
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African-American businesses disproportionately do not have those formal, entrenched,
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institutionalized types of relationships with large banks that other businesses do.
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I mean, the relationship you have with the bank is like, most relationships, it's ongoing, its'
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long, it's sustained.
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People will know, sometimes, their loan officer or in person over many years.
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And so African-American businesses and business owners really didn't have those formal relationships.
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And so when they are getting guidance on how to process these applications, when this submit these
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applications, what do you need on these to make sure that your application makes it and is approved quickly?
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African-Americans just didn't have that type of inside resources, and so they were just left out
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and excluded from receiving any of these loans.
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The killing of George Floyd by a white police officer in May 2020 renewed interest in
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supporting the economic advancement of African-Americans.
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Spreadsheets and lists of Black businesses circulated all over social media.
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Apps designed to help people find Black-owned businesses, like the BBLK app, took
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off. According to Apptopia, downloads of Black-owned business directory apps saw
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increases as much as 44 percent.
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We are trying to promote an anti-racist society, for you not to support a Black-owned business means that you're
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part of the problem. And so therefore to be part of the solution, you must be intentional.
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I don't think is OK anymore.
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I think that's what the summer indicated, its not OK anymore to just continue to go about your life and say,
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you know what, I ,you know, in my heart I support equality and equality and
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diversity and inclusion.
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No, I think it's very clear that you need to be intentional, that you need to make an effort to support
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a Black-owned business. Big companies rolled out ads and sent statements marking their commitment
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to diversity, but some activists felt that wasn't enough.
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A social media initiative called the 15% pledge called on big corporations to
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dedicate 15 percent of their shelf space to Black-owned businesses.
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Major retailers like Macy's, Sephora and Bloomingdale's have signed the pledge.
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And some big brands took an extra step and released new features.
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In June 2020, Google My Business rolled out a feature that allows businesses to
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identify if they are Black-owned.
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Yelp added a similar feature.
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Uber Eats announced it would wave delivery fees for Black-owned businesses through the end of the year.
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It worked. Amid all the online support, Black businesses saw huge spikes.
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Google searches for Black-owned businesses near me reached an all-time high between May 31
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and June 10th
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According to a survey by the Black Chamber of Commerce, about 75 percent of small Black business
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owners saw upticks in customers in the two months following Floyd's death.
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We skyrocketed over 300 percent the first month.
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We were able to open up our first brick and mortar location in September,
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which was just one month after everything had happened.
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The good times didn't last.
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After the surge, sales at many Black-owned firms plummeted back to their pre-COVID
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rates. But others have seen a lasting impact.
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Now that it's over鈥攖hat I just constantly was on the edge of my seat was like,
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OK, well, when is this over?
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You know, when...is this going to be a stint in time?
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Is this a seasonal thing?
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Is this a one-time initiative or campaign?
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And so, you know, there's still questions to be asked, if this is going
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to be something that's continued.
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It's hard to say exactly what the solution is.
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For decades, African-Americans in business have fought to dismantle systems of oppression standing in
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the way. But with the COVID-19 pandemic helping to shine a light on the economic
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inequalities that still exists, more and more people are lending a hand to struggling small
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Business owners. In the early months of the pandemic, Magic Johnson teamed up with MBE
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Capital Partners to offer $100 million dollars to minority-owned companies who were left
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out of PPP funding.
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They probably didn't have a relationship with the banks when the stimulus package went out.
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So now we're able to say, hey, you can have a relationship with us, you can keep your
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employees, keep your doors open.
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And that's what we want to do, make sure that minority-owned firms, women-owned firms,
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can stay open.
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In June 2020, PayPal announced a $100 million dollar grant program to support
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Black-owned business and economic inequality.
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In December of 2020, the company added an additional $5 million more.
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There are tons of other grants and resources for Black small business owners, like the
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Black Business Association, National Minority Business Council and the U.S.
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Black Chambers, to name a few.
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Experts say whatever aid is out there needs to be done.
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One of the first steps we need to take is to redistribute the resources in
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some way. Now, I don't want to be crude about it or reductionism
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in that process, I think the government must be involved to think also about large banks like Bank of America,
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Wells Fargo need to again, be more intentional.
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I think it's everyone's responsibility, you know, to support Black-owned businesses, not just the
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government, but non-profits, corporations.
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If everyone did their part, you know, we would allow the
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whole to become great together.
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So some things could be grants, grant opportunities that, you know,
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loans you have to pay back, grants you're afforded based on, not only the need,
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but you know what the focus area is.
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Invest in you, ready, set, grow.
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