Gap Widens

by Christine Stuart | December 19, 2007 12:18 PM | | Comments (2)

While Connecticut is a state of great prosperity, it’s also a state of enormous inequality, the latest report from Connecticut Voices for Children found.

The report, which focused less on income and more on family assets, found home ownership and median net worth have dropped since 2005, more households have zero or negative net worth, or have filed for bankruptcy, and fewer have checking accounts and get health insurance from employers.

The report also found that white households have average assets that exceed $179,000, compared to just $7,000 for minority households. “That is minority households in Connecticut on average have just 4 percent the wealth of white households. This placed our minority families at enormous financial risk, and constricts the opportunities for their children to achieve a better life,” Shelley Geballe, president of CT Voices for Children, said in a press release.

In addition, minorities are less than 60 percent as likely to own a home.

The report calculated that one in five households is asset poor, meaning they do not have sufficient resources to survive at the poverty level for three months without any income.

Looking at the state as a whole the report found Connecticut households face a high debt load, with the third highest level of average credit card debt in the country ($2,094) and the 10th highest level of average mortgage debt in the country ($151,914). In addition to debt about 71.4 percent of residents receive health insurance through their employers, but employer-provided health insurance has dropped 4.8 percent since 2000. For rate of employer-provided health insurance for children has declined 6.1 percent.

The disparity between whites and minorities continued when researchers looked at who owned small businesses. “Overall business ownership rates are a useful measure of the number of people who have the opportunity to build wealth through business capital accumulation,” the report states. Ownership rates vary greatly by race. The business ownership rate among Hispanics, for example, is only 2.7 percent whereas the rate among American Indians is 10.7 percent.

In order to address all these disparities Connecticut Voices for Children recommends greater public investment in affordable housing and in initiatives to support first-time homeownership, greater access to health insurance to protect family financial assets in the case of medical emergencies, increased public investment in educational programs and greater financial assistance so lower- and middle-income youth can afford to complete college without taking on excessive debt, and greater public and private financial assistance for small business development.

“Continued efforts to provide an accurate and complete picture of financial health in Connecticut will bring a needed revision to its affluent self-image: Connecticut is a state of great wealth for some, but a state of great need for many others,” the report concluded.

For more details on the report’s findings, click here.







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Comments

Posted by: charlie | December 19, 2007 12:46 PM

I agree with many of this group's solutions to wealth disparity, particularly better education (which, in the interests of our state actually having an economy 20 years from now, should include in-state tuition for all of our children, whether they are supposedly here "illegally" or not). However, they neglect to point out that "minorities" are also much more likely to have moved to Connecticut within the past 50 years. Meanwhile, a larger proportion of "white" families have been here for at least two or three generations. What happens to the figures on capital ownership when you adjust for that?

Posted by: on whalley | December 19, 2007 1:38 PM

"recommends greater public investment in affordable housing and in initiatives to support first-time homeownership, greater access to health insurance to protect family financial assets in the case of medical emergencies, increased public investment in educational programs and greater financial assistance so lower- and middle-income youth can afford to complete college without taking on excessive debt, and greater public and private financial assistance for small business development."

Aren't these all of the policies that got us into the current mess in the first place?

Seems to me before government thought it was a good idea to intervene black home and business ownership was up. home ownership before the "New Deal"

This country has been working harder every year at these "progressive" wealth redistribution games and every year the overall situation of the people they claim to be "helping" gets worse and worse.

Every single one of us poor to rich were far better off in the days of a small fed, before the theft mechanism of income tax and before politicians figured out they could remain in power indefinitely by putting an abrupt end to teaching people how to fish and instead handing them all fish. Fish for a vote.

The part that really gets me is how many who support this nonsense will go to their graves honestly believing they were helping anyone.

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