Authors: Randall Akeea, Sue K. Stockly, William Darity Jr., Darrick Hamilton, and Paul Ong
Abstract: We analyze survey data from the National Asset Scorecard for Communities of Color Project for asset accumulation in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The survey oversampled the American Indian/Alaska Native population in order to examine asset accumulation among a variety of racial, ethnic and legal status groups. We examine differences in asset accumulation across tribal members from a variety of American Indian tribes. Additionally, we make comparisons across those that are tribally enrolled to those that are not tribally enrolled. We find substantial difference across tribal affiliation in our data once we disaggregate the category of American Indian. Our research adds a new dimension to the literature examining differences in wealth accumulation by race and political status for a little-studied group. Specifically, we examine the intersection of race and legal status in wealth and asset accumulation.
Key Findings
- When considering all natives as compared to whites, the relationship is “not often statistically significant.” However, the relationships become more apparent when specific groups are disaggregated.
- Muscogee enrolled households had significantly lower assets and wealth, on par with those of black and Mexican/Hispanic households. Cherokee enrolled member households, conversely, had positions similar to those of white households.
- There is evidence of both a persistent racial wealth gap in Tulsa as well as a wealth gap among natives based on tribal affiliation.