Financial Adulting. Ashley Feinstein Gerstley

Financial Adulting - Ashley Feinstein Gerstley


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      In our interview, Dasha Kennedy, financial activist and founder of The Broke Black Girl, shared about the link between politics and personal finance:

       When people say leave politics out of money, there's no way to do that. When how I pay taxes is decided through policy, how much I'm going to pay in childcare is decided through policy, how my kids’ schools are funded is decided through policy, and how much I'm going to be paid is decided through policy, we can't leave that out. And to even think that that's possible comes from a place of privilege. If you have an overflow of money and access to capital, policy probably really doesn't matter to you because you have your saving grace. But for me, I have to care about those things because it impacts my money.

      Financial adults understand the smart money moves they can make, but they also understand and advocate for the changes that need to be made at the top.

      I am a white, upper-middle-class, cisgender, heterosexual, nondisabled woman. And as a financial adult, I'm going to use that privilege to bring all other women up with me. I can't call myself a feminist or anti-racist if I don't believe and care about equality for all women.

      Not to mention (and this is just icing on the cake), it's what's best for all people: our wallets, our planet, everything. As Sallie Krawcheck, the co-founder and CEO of Ellevest, says, “Nothing bad happens when women have more money.” And I bet she wouldn't disagree with me taking it a step further and saying, the world changes for the better. Much better.

      Farnoosh Torabi, financial expert and host of the So Money podcast, calls the racial wealth gap a “wealth chasm,” because that's more reflective of the size of the gap.

      Let's break it down in numbers.

Table represents Disparities in Wealth Gap by Race and Ethnicity

       Disparities in Wealth Gap by Race and Ethnicity

       *Other families – a diverse group that includes those identifying as Asian, American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, other race, and all respondents reporting more than one racial identification – have lower wealth than white families but higher wealth than Black and Hispanic families.

       Source: Federal Reserve Board, 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances.

      I didn't learn about most of this important history in school and I can only include a small glimpse in this book. To better understand the true scope of how policy after policy excluded and exploited BIPOC communities, I've included more resources in the Financial Adulting toolkit.

      The 1862 Homestead Act

      Freedman's Savings Bank

      After the Civil War, in 1865, Freedman's Savings Bank was created by the U.S. government for those previously enslaved to deposit money and receive financial education. It's important to remember that previously enslaved Black people were starting with nothing, while white Americans had been building wealth for hundreds of years.

      Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921

      In 1921, a very segregated Tulsa had a thriving business district that was often called Black Wall Street. Kevin Matthews II, founder of BuildingBread and a Tulsa native, shares: “A white mob burned and bombed the nation's wealthiest Black neighborhood, killing an estimated 300 Black people, leaving 9,000 people homeless, destroying 1,200 businesses and causing between $50 and $100 million in property damage, all in 24 hours. The city then passed laws preventing people from building on land that was burned as a result of the massacre. Insurance companies labeled it a ‘riot’ to deny payments to Black people despite the fact that there were at least six airplanes used in the attack.”

      The Federal Housing Administration (FHA)


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