Key Takeaways
- The average white household added $85,000 in wealth this year, versus just over $25,000 for Black and Hispanic families.
- The unemployment rate for white workers has held steady in recent months while it’s surged for Black and Hispanic workers.
- The new analysis underscored the inequality of the “K-shaped” economy, where better-off households gain most of the benefits while people with lower incomes struggle.
The average white American household added roughly $85,000 in wealth this year, compared to an increase of about $25,000 for average Black and Hispanic households, thanks primarily to surging stock values.
That’s according to an analysis out this week from economists at Oxford Economics, who found that Black and Hispanic families are falling behind their white counterparts on a raft of economic metrics.
What’s most remarkable, according to Oxford’s lead U.S. economist Bernard Yaros, is the fact that white households on average accumulated more than three times the household wealth of Black and Hispanic households this year.
Oxford Economics, Haver Analytics
“White households hold more than 80% of the nation’s wealth, and the average white household has accumulated substantially more net wealth over the past year than the average Black or Hispanic household,” Yaros wrote.
White households tend to be more heavily invested in stocks, so they’ve benefitted from 2025’s AI-fueled equities boom. Black and Hispanic households, on the other hand, tend to have more wealth tied up in their homes, the values of which have risen more slowly recently.
What This Means For The Economy
When large segments of a population are struggling according to so many metrics, like wages and wealth, the broader economy suffers and the society is more vulnerable to social upheaval.
By almost every metric, white families are doing better, according to Yaros’s analysis. Black and Hispanic families have been hit harder by inflation and are experiencing higher unemployment rates as well.
Since April, when President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement started to drag on the labor market, white unemployment held steady at 3.8% through September. In the same period, unemployment for Blacks surged from 6.3% to 7.5% and from 5.2% to 5.5% for Hispanics, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The analysis underscores the inequalities inherent in America’s “K-shaped” economy: Wealthier households grow increasingly secure and comfortable, while lower income families struggle to stretch their paychecks to cover necessities that keep getting more expensive.
