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http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n16/walter-benn-michaels/what-matters

The neoliberal ideal is a world where rich people of all races and sexes 
can happily enjoy their wealth, and where the injustices produced not by 
discrimination but by exploitation – there are fewer poor people (7 per 
cent) than black people (9 per cent) at Harvard, and Harvard’s not the 
worst – are discreetly sent around to the back door.

--Walter Benn Michaels


===

NY Times, December 1, 2009
In Job Hunt, College Degree Can’t Close Racial Gap
By MICHAEL LUO

Johnny R. Williams, 30, would appear to be an unlikely person to have to 
fret about the impact of race on his job search, with companies like 
JPMorgan Chase and an M.B.A. from the University of Chicago on his résumé.

But after graduating from business school last year and not having much 
success garnering interviews, he decided to retool his résumé, scrubbing 
it of any details that might tip off his skin color. His membership, for 
instance, in the African-American business students association? Deleted.

“If they’re going to X me,” Mr. Williams said, “I’d like to at least get 
in the door first.”

Similarly, Barry Jabbar Sykes, 37, who has a degree in mathematics from 
Morehouse College, a historically black college in Atlanta, now uses 
Barry J. Sykes in his continuing search for an information technology 
position, even though he has gone by Jabbar his whole life.

“Barry sounds like I could be from Ireland,” he said.

That race remains a serious obstacle in the job market for 
African-Americans, even those with degrees from respected colleges, may 
seem to some people a jarring contrast to decades of progress by blacks, 
culminating in President Obama’s election.

But there is ample evidence that racial inequities remain when it comes 
to employment. Black joblessness has long far outstripped that of 
whites. And strikingly, the disparity for the first 10 months of this 
year, as the recession has dragged on, has been even more pronounced for 
those with college degrees, compared with those without. Education, it 
seems, does not level the playing field — in fact, it appears to have 
made it more uneven.

College-educated black men, especially, have struggled relative to their 
white counterparts in this downturn, according to figures from the 
Bureau of Labor Statistics. The unemployment rate for black male college 
graduates 25 and older in 2009 has been nearly twice that of white male 
college graduates — 8.4 percent compared with 4.4 percent.

Various academic studies have confirmed that black job seekers have a 
harder time than whites. A study published several years ago in The 
American Economic Review titled “Are Emily and Greg More Employable than 
Lakisha and Jamal?” found that applicants with black-sounding names 
received 50 percent fewer callbacks than those with white-sounding names.

A more recent study, published this year in The Journal of Labor 
Economics found white, Asian and Hispanic managers tended to hire more 
whites and fewer blacks than black managers did.

The discrimination is rarely overt, according to interviews with more 
than two dozen college-educated black job seekers around the country, 
many of them out of work for months. Instead, those interviewed told 
subtler stories, referring to surprised looks and offhand comments, 
interviews that fell apart almost as soon as they began, and the sudden 
loss of interest from companies after meetings.

Whether or not each case actually involved bias, the possibility has 
furnished an additional agonizing layer of second-guessing for many as 
their job searches have dragged on.

“It does weigh on you in the search because you’re wondering, how much 
is race playing a factor in whether I’m even getting a first call, or 
whether I’m even getting an in-person interview once they hear my voice 
and they know I’m probably African-American?” said Terelle Hairston, 25, 
a graduate of Yale University who has been looking for work since the 
summer while also trying to get a marketing consulting start-up off the 
ground. “You even worry that the hiring manager may not be as interested 
in diversity as the H.R. manager or upper management.”

Mr. Williams recently applied to a Dallas money management firm that had 
posted a position with top business schools. The hiring manager had 
seemed ecstatic to hear from him, telling him they had trouble getting 
people from prestigious business schools to move to the area. Mr. 
Williams had left New York and moved back in with his parents in Dallas 
to save money.

But when Mr. Williams later met two men from the firm for lunch, he said 
they appeared stunned when he strolled up to introduce himself.

“Their eyes kind of hit the ceiling a bit,” he said. “It was kind of 
quiet for about 45 seconds.”

The company’s interest in him quickly cooled, setting off the inevitable 
questions in his mind.

Discrimination in many cases may not even be intentional, some job 
seekers pointed out, but simply a matter of people gravitating toward 
similar people, casting about for the right “cultural fit,” a buzzword 
often heard in corporate circles.

There is also the matter of how many jobs, especially higher-level ones, 
are never even posted and depend on word-of-mouth and informal networks, 
in many cases leaving blacks at a disadvantage. A recent study published 
in the academic journal Social Problems found that white males receive 
substantially more job leads for high-level supervisory positions than 
women and members of minorities.

Many interviewed, however, wrestled with “pulling the race card,” 
groping between their cynicism and desire to avoid the stigma that 
blacks are too quick to claim victimhood. After all, many had gone to 
good schools and had accomplished résumés. Some had grown up in 
well-to-do settings, with parents who had raised them never to doubt how 
high they could climb. Moreover, there is President Obama, perhaps the 
ultimate embodiment of that belief.

Certainly, they conceded, there are times when their race can be 
beneficial, particularly with companies that have diversity programs. 
But many said they sensed that such opportunities had been cut back over 
the years and even more during the downturn. Others speculated there was 
now more of a tendency to deem diversity unnecessary after Mr. Obama’s 
triumph.

In fact, whether Mr. Obama’s election has been good or bad for their job 
prospects is hotly debated. Several interviewed went so far as to say 
that they believed there was only so much progress that many in the 
country could take, and that there was now a backlash against blacks.

“There is resentment toward his presidency among some because of his 
race,” said Edward Verner, a Morehouse alumnus from New Jersey who was 
laid off as a regional sales manager and has been able to find only 
part-time work. “This has affected well-educated, African-American job 
seekers.”

It is difficult to overstate the degree that they say race permeates 
nearly every aspect of their job searches, from how early they show up 
to interviews to the kinds of anecdotes they try to come up with.

“You want to be a nonthreatening, professional black guy,” said Winston 
Bell, 40, of Cleveland, who has been looking for a job in business 
development.

He drew an analogy to several prominent black sports broadcasters. “You 
don’t want to be Stephen A. Smith. You want to be Bryant Gumbel. You 
don’t even want to be Stuart Scott. You don’t want to be, ‘Booyah.’ ”

Nearly all said they agonized over job applications that asked them 
whether they would like to identify their race. Most said they usually 
did not.

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