Built to Last: Why HBCU Alumni Are More Likely to Marry Each Other — and What That Tells Us About the Power of Community Spaces

This here, right now, at this very moment, is all that matters to me. I love you. That’s urgent like a motherf**ker. – Darius Lovehall

There is a particular kind of magic that happens when Black people are given the space to simply be to lead, to create, to fail and succeed without the exhausting weight of being a perpetual outsider. Historically Black Colleges and Universities have always understood this. For more than 150 years, HBCUs have offered something that no diversity initiative, no DEI task force, and no affinity group within a predominantly white institution can fully replicate: an entire ecosystem built in, by, and for Black people. The effects of that ecosystem ripple outward in ways we are still measuring including into who HBCU alumni choose to build their lives with.

Research into the marital patterns of African Americans reveals a striking divergence between HBCU graduates and their counterparts who attended predominantly white institutions. HBCU alumni marry each other — Black men marrying Black women, Black women marrying Black men at significantly higher rates than African Americans who attended PWIs, where interracial marriages are considerably more common. This is not a coincidence. It is the natural fruit of what intentional community spaces produce.

The baseline numbers are sobering. Only 31% of Black Americans are currently married, compared to 48% of all Americans. Half of African Americans have never been married, compared to 34% of the general population, making African Americans the least married of any major racial or ethnic group in the country. There are approximately 5.18 million Black married-couple families in the United States today. That number has room — significant room — to grow. Currently, about 9–10% of Black college students attend HBCUs. Among college-educated Black newlyweds at PWIs, roughly 21% marry someone from another racial or ethnic group, with that figure rising to 30% among college-educated Black men. The picture at HBCUs is markedly different, and the reasons are structural, not accidental.

The social architecture of an HBCU where Black students are the majority, the leadership, the faculty, the homecoming court, the engineering honor society, and the debate team means that the romantic world reflects the academic world. HBCU alumni who marry are overwhelmingly likely to have met their spouse within a Black social and professional network, often one that traces its roots directly back to campus. African Americans who attend PWIs, by contrast, are exposed to a social universe numerically and institutionally dominated by white peers. Friendships, romantic relationships, and professional networks form disproportionately across racial lines not through any individual fault, but as a straightforward consequence of who is in the room. When your environment is 85% white, the statistical likelihood of cross-racial coupling rises organically. The HBCU alumni network functions, among other things, as a long-running and remarkably effective matchmaking institution one whose impact on community formation has never been fully quantified.

Sociologists have long understood that residential and institutional proximity is one of the strongest predictors of who people marry. We meet our partners in the spaces we inhabit — at work, at school, in our neighborhoods, at our houses of worship. The institution you attend for four formative years, the one that shapes your professional ambitions, your intellectual identity, your social circle, and your sense of self, will inevitably shape who you consider a natural life partner. For HBCU students, those four years are spent in an environment where Black excellence is not exceptional it is expected. Where Black love is not a political statement but a daily reality, visible in the couples holding hands on the quad, in the married faculty members co-teaching courses, in the alumni couples who return to homecoming year after year. Love, like ambition and leadership, is modeled. Young people see what is possible and, consciously or not, begin to orient their own futures accordingly.

PWI environments, for all their academic prestige, rarely offer this. Black students at PWIs often describe a bifurcated social experience belonging to affinity groups and cultural organizations that provide community, while simultaneously navigating a broader campus culture in which they are the minority. Black love is possible at PWIs, of course, and it flourishes there too. But the structural conditions do not make it the default. They make it something you find in spite of your environment, not because of it.

This conversation extends well beyond marriage rates, though those rates are a particularly measurable indicator of something larger. What HBCUs demonstrate is the transformative power of institutions that a community owns, shapes, and sustains for itself. This principle has animated Black institution-building in America since Reconstruction from Black Wall Street in Tulsa to the network of Black-owned banks, newspapers, hospitals, and churches that constituted what historians call the “Black counterpublic.” When a community has its own institutions, it controls its own narratives. It defines its own standards of beauty, intelligence, leadership, and desirability. It produces its own role models, generates its own wealth pathways, and creates an internal ecosystem dense enough that community members can meet each other’s needs — economic, social, spiritual, romantic — without having to seek fulfillment exclusively in outside spaces. The higher intra-community marriage rate among HBCU alumni is one data point in a much larger argument: that Black institutions do not merely provide education or services. They produce belonging. And belonging, once cultivated, has a way of reproducing itself in careers built together, in communities sustained together, and in families formed together.

For a publication dedicated to the intersection of Black financial life and Black excellence, the marriage data carries specific economic weight. Marriage, when it functions well, is one of the most powerful wealth-building vehicles available to any household. Two incomes, shared expenses, combined assets, coordinated estate planning, and intergenerational wealth transfer — these are the mechanisms by which families accumulate and maintain economic stability across generations. The racial wealth gap in the United States is staggering and persistent. For Black families to close that gap through their own accumulated power, marriage stability within the community matters. When HBCU alumni marry each other, they are pooling Black wealth with Black wealth building households that invest in Black communities, buy homes in Black neighborhoods, fund Black businesses, and leave assets to Black children. This is not about exclusion. It is about the compounding power of economic solidarity.

HBCU alumni already tend to earn strong incomes, leverage their alumni networks for professional advancement, and demonstrate higher rates of giving back to their alma maters and communities. According to the Gallup-USA Funds Minority College Graduates Report, 40% of Black HBCU graduates report thriving in financial well-being, compared to just 29% of Black graduates from non-HBCUs — the largest well-being gap Gallup measured between the two groups. Economic stability is one of the strongest individual predictors of marriage. Add to that the wealth-building power of sustained intra-community partnership, and the picture that emerges is of a uniquely powerful pipeline, one that begins with a campus in a college town and ends, generations later, in families that have genuinely built something lasting.

The most compelling question the data raises is not descriptive it is projective. If the HBCU environment produces meaningfully higher rates of Black marriage and intra-community partnership, what would happen to African American marriage rates if the share of Black college students attending HBCUs grew from today’s 10% to 25%, 50%, or even 75%? The answer, modeled carefully against current demographic data, is striking. These projections are calibrated estimates rather than census findings — they are directionally honest and mathematically grounded, built from known marriage rate differentials, HBCU graduation advantages, and the share of college-educated adults within the total Black population. One additional factor amplifies every projection: research shows that Black students at HBCUs are 33% more likely to graduate than their counterparts at comparable institutions, meaning scaling HBCU enrollment also scales Black degree attainment itself.

At 25% HBCU enrollment, roughly where HBCU attendance stood in the mid-1970s, the overall Black marriage rate would likely move from 31% toward 33–34%. That may sound modest, but in a population of nearly 47 million Black Americans, a two-to-three point increase represents roughly 500,000 to 700,000 additional married Black households, with intra-community marriage among college-educated Black Americans rising from roughly 79–80% toward 82–83%. At 50%, a transformational shift where the majority of college-educated Black Americans are formed in Black-centered environments, the overall Black marriage rate would likely climb toward 36–38%, closing nearly a third of the gap with the national average. The HBCU alumni network, at this density, becomes a dominant force in Black professional and social life: a self-reinforcing ecosystem where Black partner exposure is high across the entire college-educated class, translating to roughly 1.2 to 1.5 million additional Black married households.

At 75% HBCU enrollment, history offers its own precedent. Before integration dispersed the Black college-going population into majority-white institutions, HBCUs educated virtually all Black college graduates and during that era, African Americans age 35 and older were actually more likely to be married than white Americans, a trend that held from 1890 until sometime in the 1960s. A return toward 75% HBCU enrollment would not be an experiment in an unknown direction. It would be a partial return to conditions that demonstrably worked with a projected Black marriage rate of 40–42%, approaching parity with the national average for the first time in over six decades, and as many as 2 to 2.5 million additional Black married households.

HBCU EnrollmentEst. Black Marriage RateIntra-Community MarriageNew Married Households
10% (Today)31%~79–80%Baseline
25%33–34%~82–83%+500K–700K
50%36–38%~86–88%+1.2M–1.5M
75%40–42%~90%++2M–2.5M

These projections carry honest caveats. Students who self-select HBCUs today may already have stronger pro-community cultural orientations, meaning the marginal effect per new HBCU enrollee may be somewhat smaller than current graduate data suggest. Marriage rates are also multi-causal — mass incarceration, income inequality, student debt, and campus gender ratio imbalances all independently shape outcomes. No single variable, however powerful, tells the whole story. But the directional conclusion is unmistakable: HBCU enrollment is a lever of community formation, not merely academic achievement. Pulling it harder produces more Black marriages, more Black wealth, and more Black families compounding across generations.

Every few years, critics question the continued relevance of HBCUs in an era of expanding integration and formal diversity efforts at major universities. The marriage data, alongside every other metric by which HBCU graduates outperform expectations relative to their socioeconomic backgrounds, is a decisive answer to that question. HBCUs are not relics of segregation. They are proof of concept — evidence that when Black people are given a fully resourced, culturally affirming environment to grow in, they flourish in ways that reverberate across every dimension of life. The lesson is not that PWIs should be abandoned or that integration was wrong. The lesson is that the goal was never assimilation — it was equity. And equity means Black people having their own institutions, not merely access to someone else’s. It means Tuskegee and Xavier and North Carolina A&T and Prairie View and Dillard and Morgan State existing not as alternatives of last resort but as premier, first-choice destinations that produce exactly the kind of human outcomes — professional, civic, familial — that their graduates embody.

The couples who meet at HBCU homecoming and marry a few years later are not a sentimental footnote to the HBCU story. They are a central chapter. They are what it looks like when a community invests in itself deeply enough that its members find each other, choose each other, and build together. The data suggests that with more investment — more students, more resources, more deliberate choice — the results scale. Two million additional Black married households is not a fantasy. It is arithmetic. And it starts with the decision of where to spend four years.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Tommy Ain’t Got No Job—But He Had a Portfolio: Rewriting Financial Narratives Through Black Fictional Wealth

Reclaiming the right to dream the future, strengthening the muscle to imagine together as Black people, is a revolutionary decolonizing activity.” — adrienne maree brown

A running sitcom joke obscures one of the most instructive models in African American economic imagination. Revisiting Tommy Strawn as a deliberate investor not a layabout reveals what cooperative wealth-building looks like when it is practiced quietly, structurally, and across generations. For three decades, Martin Payne’s crew delivered the same punchline. Tommy Strawn — affable, well-dressed, perpetually present at Nipsey’s in the middle of a weekday would absorb the ritual taunt: ‘You ain’t got no job.’ The laugh track followed. So did the audience. The joke endured not because it was especially clever, but because it tapped something deeper than comedy: a cultural reflex that made unemployment a more plausible explanation for Tommy’s idleness than financial independence. That reflex, and what it costs, is worth examining seriously.

The question this article puts forward is not merely playful. What if Tommy Strawn was never unemployed? What if, by the time the show’s first season aired in 1992, Tommy had already spent a decade as treasurer of a Black investment club quietly compounding returns, attending shareholder meetings, and managing a diversified portfolio that rendered the forty-hour work week optional? The speculation is fictional in origin. Its implications are not.

Begin with the sociology of the joke itself. In the 1990s African American community, and in many circles today, the premise that a Black man could simply choose not to hold a traditional job because he had built sufficient passive income was, and remains, genuinely difficult to accept. It was not that the mechanics of investing were unknown. It was that the social imagination around Black wealth had not yet made room for this particular portrait. The more intuitive read — the one requiring no further explanation — was that Tommy must be hustling. He must be in the streets. A drug dealer felt more believable than an investor. The illegitimate path to economic autonomy was easier to accommodate than the legitimate one. Tommy, in this reading, never corrected anyone. Perhaps he understood that defending compound interest to a booth at Nipsey’s was not worth the breath. That silence, the invisibility of deliberate Black wealth-building is itself a form of cultural tax, one levied not by any external institution but by the limits of a community’s own economic imagination.

HBCU Money has argued consistently that economic literacy in Black America cannot be reduced to numeracy. It requires cultural reprogramming as a revision of the stories communities tell themselves about what wealth looks like, who holds it, and how it is built. Reimagining Tommy Strawn serves exactly that purpose. In its 2023 analysis, this publication asked what would have happened had Martin and Gina invested their $4,000 tax refund in Microsoft stock in 1995 rather than plowing it into a failed restaurant venture. The answer: a return exceeding 7,500 percent, translating to more than $300,000 by 2023. Had the couple sustained annual contributions of $4,000 into a diversified S&P 500 portfolio over the same period, their accumulated position would have exceeded $500,000 more than enough for their children’s tuition, a second property, or early retirement. These are not exotic outcomes. They are the arithmetic of patience applied to ordinary capital. Tommy, in our reimagining, knew this arithmetic by heart.

Let us construct the canon more precisely. Sometime in the early 1980s before Nipsey’s became the crew’s unofficial headquarters, before Martin’s radio career, before Cole had fully committed to being Cole — Tommy Strawn helped found the Detroit Black Investors Circle. Twelve members: working-class and middle-class Black men and women, some from his church, one a professor at Lewis College of Business, another a UPS driver with a subscription to Barron’s, another a beautician who had been tracking Coca-Cola’s dividend yield for years. They pooled contributions monthly, researched companies collectively, and invested with a long-term horizon. Their earliest positions were conservative: Johnson & Johnson in the mid-1980s, followed by Microsoft and Apple as the decade turned. Tommy, organised and methodical in ways his friends attributed to personality rather than purpose, was elected treasurer. His absence from the traditional labour market was not idleness. It was the logical outcome of a deliberate choice to treat intellectual capital and financial stewardship as his primary vocation.

The question of origins matters here, because the mythology of wealth-building in Black America too often presents the starting point as heroic or anomalous. It need not be either. Tommy’s seed capital, in this reconstruction, could have arrived through any number of entirely plausible channels. A financial aid refund from his time at Clark Atlanta or Southern University — the residual after Pell Grants and scholarships covered his tuition — deposited into a brokerage account rather than spent on spring break. A grandmother’s savings bonds and rolled currency discovered in an old armoire, pressed on Tommy because he was the responsible one, and treated not as a windfall but as seed capital. A church scholarship of $1,500 from an AME congregation, technically earmarked for tuition but freed up by other financial aid and redirected into three shares of Johnson & Johnson after a student-union speaker explained compound interest. A single tax refund of $1,200 — the same refund Martin and Gina would later squander — invested rather than consumed. None of these origins are dramatic. All of them are real. That is precisely the point.

What DBIC built over two decades was not merely a stock portfolio. It was a theory of institutional ownership, applied systematically to the infrastructure of Black Detroit. The club understood what too many investors of any background do not: that the most durable returns are not always the most legible ones, and that communities which fail to own the institutions embedded in their daily life are perpetually renting their own cultural and economic existence from someone else.

Nipsey’s was the first move. The bar-and-grill where Martin and the crew spent their evenings was also the informal civic centre of their block being part town square, part think tank, part après-work debrief. When its owner signalled, in the late 1990s, that he was considering selling to outsiders, DBIC moved with the precision of investors who had spent years watching their community’s assets change hands. They did not attempt to purchase the business outright. They structured a minority equity stake — thirty percent in exchange for capital improvements, point-of-sale infrastructure, and a customer loyalty programme. The back room became their biweekly boardroom. The arrangement was not charity. It was the conversion of social capital into ownership.

The acquisition of a stake in WZUP, the radio station operated by the chronically overstretched Stan Winters, was more consequential and more instructive about how Black institutional assets are lost. Stan had built something real: a Black-owned frequency with genuine audience loyalty and genuine cultural significance. What nearly destroyed it was not programming failure or audience attrition but an IRS liability of $20,000. Without intervention, WZUP would be sold to whoever came in with the highest bid. History, unrevised, confirms that fear: the station eventually became WEHA, a country and western outlet with no memory of what it had been.

In our revision, DBIC moved before that could happen. The conversation did not occur in a boardroom. It occurred at Nipsey’s, over cards, when Stan too proud to ask directly but too desperate not to signal let slip that the walls were closing in. Tommy listened. He returned to DBIC with a proposal whose logic was institutional rather than sentimental: this is not a struggling radio station, it is a platform, a frequency, a piece of Detroit’s Black cultural infrastructure that cannot be permitted to become country music (although do not be mistaken, African America listens to and perform that as well). The group structured a convertible note of $300,000: enough to retire the IRS debt, cover operational arrears, and fund a capital improvement plan. Stan retained full operational and creative control. DBIC received two advisory board seats and co-development rights on new revenue lines. If the note was repaid within five years, the arrangement dissolved cleanly. If it was not, it would convert to a forty percent equity stake.

What Stan did with that lifeline is where the story becomes genuinely instructive. WZUP expanded into online streaming at a moment when most Black-owned radio stations were treating the internet as a secondary concern. A Virginia State University engineering professor and Detroit native within the DBIC’s membership recruited to the club in 1997 pressed the case for early digital infrastructure with the same conviction the group applied to its equity selections. By the early 2000s, WZUP was streaming to Black Detroiters in Atlanta, Chicago, and Houston: people who had left the city but never stopped needing to hear home.

The second expansion was a Youth Podcast Incubator, constructed in deliberate partnership with HBCU communications and business programmes across the Midwest. The DBIC’s vision was regional from the start. Lewis College of Business, Detroit’s own HBCU, founded in 1928 by Violet T. Lewis and the only historically Black college in Michigan, served as the anchor institution. Chicago State University brought the Chicago market’s media energy into the pipeline. Central State University and Wilberforce University in Ohio, separated by fewer than ten miles in Greene County and together representing one of the most concentrated pockets of Black academic tradition in the country, completed a four-school corridor that no single institution could have anchored alone. Students from these campuses received studio time, mentorship from working journalists and broadcasters, and a direct pipeline to on-air opportunities. The strongest podcast properties would be co-owned between student creators and the WZUP multimedia umbrella, with DBIC and their respective HBCU’s endowment holding a minority stake in each new venture. This was talent development with equity implications, a structure that treated young Black media professionals not as beneficiaries but as future owners.

The third move was television. DBIC acquired a minority ownership stake in a UHF licence, partnered with a local public-access station for shared production facilities, and launched a local evening newscast staffed by journalists trained through the WZUP pipeline. It was underfunded by network standards and precisely right for what it was: a Black-owned, community-rooted media operation accountable to one zip code. When the convertible note period expired, Stan chose not to repay it. He wanted DBIC as permanent partners. The conversion happened on good terms. What had begun as a rescue had become something neither party had fully anticipated: a Black-owned multimedia company with a radio station at its core, a streaming footprint, a podcast network seeded by HBCU talent, and a local television operation — all of it rooted in one community and answerable to it.

The DBIC’s relationship with First Independence Bank, founded in Detroit in 1970 and one of only a handful of African American-owned banks in the country, followed a similar logic, applied to the most fundamental layer of capital infrastructure. As early as 1998, the group moved its operating accounts and investment reserves to First Independence, removing their dollars from institutions that had historically redlined the neighbourhoods DBIC members called home. In 2003, they went further. Using pooled capital from years of dividends and real estate returns, DBIC participated in a private placement offering from the bank — purchasing a tranche of equity not available on the open stock market. They were not simply depositors or well-wishers. They were owners, with a seat at the table where lending priorities, community reinvestment strategies, and product development were decided. That influence translated into a small-dollar business loan product specifically designed for African American entrepreneurs under thirty — the kind of accessible, low-barrier capital that national banks had never built for Black Detroit. Nipsey’s, fittingly, became the first business funded under the initiative. The loop closed precisely.

Lewis College of Business occupied a different register in the DBIC’s portfolio, one that illuminates the distinction between institutional philanthropy and institutional investment. Founded by Violet T. Lewis in 1928, the school had spent decades doing what chronically underfunded Black institutions always do: surviving on mission, loyalty, and insufficient material support. By the time DBIC had accumulated enough capital to think at an institutional scale, Lewis College was showing the accumulated strain of that equation. Enrollment was fragile. Its endowment was thin. The city it had served for generations had not reciprocated with anything resembling adequate financial commitment.

Tommy brought it to the DBIC not as a cause but as a calculation. Michigan’s only HBCU sat in their city, trained their people, and occupied a position in Detroit’s intellectual and professional life that could not be replaced once lost. The group directed a portion of its annual dividend income into an endowed scholarship fund for Lewis College business and communications students many of whom would eventually feed into the WZUP incubator. DBIC members attended board meetings, brokered introductions between Lewis alumni and the professional networks the club had built over two decades, and applied the same long-horizon discipline to the school that they applied to their stock selections. Not what does Lewis College need this year, but what does it need to still be standing in thirty years.

In this revision, that sustained commitment meant Lewis College never reached the financial crisis that in actual history cost it its accreditation. It did not close. It did not require rescue or rebranding to survive. Backed by DBIC capital and by the talent pipeline flowing through the Midwest HBCU corridor, it evolved on its own terms expanding into design and entrepreneurship, deepening its ties with Detroit’s creative and manufacturing industries, eventually becoming the institution now known as Pensole Lewis College of Business and Design. Not as a comeback story. As a continuum. The difference between an institution that transforms by choice and one that transforms by necessity is the difference between legacy and luck. DBIC gave Lewis College the conditions to choose.

The data against which this fiction is calibrated is not encouraging. According to HBCU Money’s 2025 analysis, only seven percent of Black households report receiving passive income of any kind from rental properties, interest, dividends, or business ownership compared to twenty-four percent of white households. Where such income exists in Black families, the median annual amount barely reaches $2,000, against nearly $5,000 for white households. This disparity is not incidental. It reflects generations of deliberate exclusion: redlined mortgage markets, brokerage firms that declined to serve Black neighbourhoods, financial institutions that systematically underfinanced Black-owned businesses and over-regulated them when they did. The passive income gap is, in this sense, the most accurate single measure of American wealth inequality, because it captures not just what people earn but how money multiplies or, for most Black households, how it does not.

The African American investment club tradition was never as invisible as mainstream culture suggested. By the late 1990s, the National Association of Investors Corporation estimated that nearly twenty percent of the nation’s investment clubs were predominantly African American groups meeting in church basements, barbershops, and community centres, pooling monthly contributions, researching blue-chip dividend payers, and building wealth in the precise manner that Tommy Strawn practiced in our reconstruction. These clubs rarely received national press coverage. Martin Payne certainly never depicted one. The cultural assumption that Tommy must be a hustler, not an investor, was partly the product of that invisibility — a vacuum in representation that the show’s writers, like most of their audience, had absorbed without question.

The institutional implication is straightforward. What DBIC practised informally can be formalised and scaled. An HBCU Investment Club Federation drawing alumni networks from Wiley, Spelman, Tuskegee, Livingstone, and the Midwest corridor institutions that anchored WZUP’s incubator could pool capital across institutions, invest jointly, and provide undergraduates in finance and business programmes with direct market exposure and mentorship. The strongest student-run clubs could evolve into intergenerational family investment vehicles or neighbourhood financial cooperatives. Black churches, fraternities and sororities, and civic organisations can serve as the social infrastructure around which these cooperatives are organised and sustained. Local and state governments can incentivise the model through tax credits or matched-savings programmes. Black-owned community development financial institutions — CDFIs — are just one of the natural custodians of the institutional capital these cooperatives accumulate.

African American buying power is projected to reach $2.1 trillion by 2026. The operative question is not how much Black America earns. It is how much it retains, multiplies, and institutionalises. Tommy Strawn’s silence at Nipsey’s was not passivity. It was the patience of someone who had made a different calculation and who understood that defending compound interest to people who couldn’t yet see it was less valuable than quietly demonstrating its results. The task now is to make that calculation visible, replicable, and structural. To build federations where DBIC built a single club. To establish HBCU incubators where WZUP built a single pipeline. To treat Black-owned banks not as gestures of solidarity but as instruments of capital allocation. To fund Lewis Colleges before they reach the edge, not after.

The next time somebody says ‘you ain’t got no job,’ the correct response may simply be a quarterly dividend statement. The Tommy Doctrine is not lore. It is a blueprint. The work is to make it logistics.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

LeBron James Parrots Laura Ingraham in the City Dr. King Died in Trying to Build African American Institutional Power

LeBron James net worth is equivalent to the assets of our largest African American owned bank. There is no other world where that would be imaginable for any other group. Elon Musk will never be worth J.P. Morgan Chase. Ever. – William A. Foster, IV

Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his final address in Memphis naming specific Black banks and calling for an insurance-in movement. Fifty-eight years later, a billionaire athlete complained about the hotel. The distance between those two moments is not irony — it is a measure of strategic retreat.

On the night of April 3, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. stood at Bishop Charles Mason Temple in Memphis, exhausted and battling a sore throat, and delivered one of the most emotionally charged and rhetorically brilliant speeches of his life. He had come to the city in solidarity with sanitation workers striking for basic economic dignity. Despite death threats that had delayed his flight from Atlanta that morning, he spoke for more than forty minutes, warning of difficult days ahead and closing with the declaration that he had been to the mountaintop and seen the Promised Land. He was assassinated the following evening.

What is rarely quoted from that speech and what HBCU Money has taken care to preserve is the passage in which King made his economic program for Memphis concrete, specific, and institutional. He did not speak in generalities. He called on the audience to take their money out of downtown banks and deposit it in Tri-State Bank. He called for a “bank-in” movement in Memphis. He directed people to the city’s Black-owned savings and loan associations and noted that the SCLC itself already held an account there. He named six or seven Black insurance companies operating in Memphis and called for an “insurance-in.” He framed the entire program within a broader economic argument: that while African Americans were poor individually measured against white America, collectively they were richer than all but nine nations on earth, and that collective wealth, if pooled through Black institutions, constituted power.

That passage is not rhetorical flourish. It is an operational directive, delivered the night before King’s assassination, in the specific city where he was killed, naming a specific bank by name. It is the most concrete institutional economic program King ever publicly offered, and it has been almost entirely displaced in public memory by the prophetic closing of the same speech. The selective amnesia is itself diagnostic. America, including much of Black America, prefers the King who stood on the mountaintop to the King who told people where to put their deposits. This matters enormously for understanding what Memphis is, what it has failed to become, and what the periodic celebrity dismissal of the city — most recently by LeBron James — reveals about the distance between that 1968 directive and present institutional reality.

In early April 2026, James used an appearance on the YouTube program “Bob Does Sports” to suggest that the Memphis Grizzlies ought to relocate to Nashville, citing that city’s stadium infrastructure and general amenities, and subsequently doubled down, declaring Memphis one of two cities he does not enjoy visiting. The civic response became an invitation from the mayor, social media indignation, bruised local pride was understandable and structurally irrelevant. The relevant question is not whether LeBron James respects Memphis. It is whether the institutional ecosystem King described in April 1968, and specified with operational precision, has been built. The answer, measured against King’s own program, is complicated by a history that is both more painful and more instructive than simple failure.

Before arriving at that history, however, the LeBron episode demands one additional layer of analysis because it does not stand alone. In 2018, Fox News host Laura Ingraham went on air to rebuke James for his political commentary, instructing him to stay out of politics and stick to basketball, insisting it was “always unwise to seek political advice from someone who gets paid $100 million a year to bounce a ball.” The backlash was swift, and James’s response was pointed. He declared he would not simply shut up and dribble, and went on to open the I Promise School in his hometown of Akron, Ohio — a public school providing comprehensive support for at-risk students, funded through his foundation. James was right to refuse Ingraham’s framing. The “shut up and dribble” directive is the cultural expression of what William C. Rhoden, in Forty Million Dollar Slaves, identifies as the plantation logic of professional sports: the athlete as performer whose value is purely athletic, whose civic commitments are unwelcome, and whose wealth exists to flow outward from the community rather than back into it.

The irony that must be named directly is this: James rejected that logic when it was applied to him, and built an institution in response. He did not extend the same institutional orientation to Memphis. The city that “disappointed” him because of the hotel, the road game, the general atmosphere of a random Thursday is a majority-Black city with 135 years of planned African American homeownership, a 164-year-old HBCU, and the institutional legacy of a bank that King named from the pulpit on the last night of his life. None of that was visible to James from the Hyatt Centric. The “shut up and dribble” framework, rejected rightly when applied to James himself, describes with some precision what James did to Memphis: reduced it to its surface entertainment value and found it wanting, without asking the institutional questions that actually matter. An African American with resources disparaging an African American city instead of embracing it and understanding the institutional opportunity to enhance African America’s collective power cannot be understated. It highlights an all too common theme of individual African Americans who have “made it” without recognizing they are outliers, and that for success to be the rule for the community, institutions must be invested in, supported, and prioritized.

This is not a personal indictment of LeBron James — Mis-education of the Negro by Dr. Carter G. Woodson should be required reading, though. It is a structural observation about the orientation that Rhoden’s analysis predicts: individual Black wealth, generated within systems designed to extract it from communities, does not automatically produce institutional investment in those communities even when the individual is as civic-minded as James demonstrably is in his own city. The I Promise School is real. The Akron commitment is genuine. And Memphis remains, from that same individual’s perspective, a hotel problem rather than an institutional opportunity. Rhoden’s central argument is not that Black millionaires are individually responsible for community disinvestment — it is that the systems through which Black wealth flows are designed to produce individual prosperity that exits the community rather than institutional investment that stays within it. Nothing in the architecture of the NBA, the endorsement economy, or the entertainment industry creates an incentive for a traveling athlete to evaluate a city’s HBCU endowment or the lending capacity of its Black-owned bank.

Jay-Z mapped the same structural condition in “The Story of O.J.,” building the song around the observation that individual wealth and celebrity do not insulate Black Americans from structural racial economic realities, and advancing the argument that credit, property ownership, and collective capital formation are the mechanisms through which communities build power that persists across generations. The song’s target is the O.J. Simpson logic — the belief that sufficient individual success creates an exemption from collective vulnerability, or to put it more bluntly, when African Americans find success in Others’ institutions and firms and mistake that for African America building institutional power of its own that provides success to the entire community at scale. Its prescription is identical to what King stated in Memphis in 1968: pool the money, build the institutions, acquire the land. What neither Jay-Z’s song nor King’s speech can do is execute that program on behalf of communities that have chosen, generation by generation, not to execute it themselves.

The organizational failure in Memphis and in Detroit, Baltimore, New Orleans, and every other majority-Black American city watching its Black-owned financial institutions contract or disappear is not simply a matter of external pressure or historical exclusion. It is a behavioral pattern: African Americans depositing at Bank of America, insuring with non-African American insurance carriers, mortgaging through institutions that redlined their grandparents’ neighborhoods, and then lamenting the absence of viable Black banks as though those banks failed through no fault of the community they exist to serve.

Nowhere is this contradiction more visible, or more consequential, than among the Black athletes and entertainers whose wealth is large enough to move institutional needles. LeBron James is worth an estimated billion dollars. It is a reasonable question and one that no interviewer has thought to ask whether any meaningful portion of that wealth is deposited in, invested through, or intermediated by an African American-owned bank. Whether his production companies bank with OneUnited. Whether his real estate holdings are financed through Liberty Bank. Whether his foundation’s assets are custodied at Citizens Trust. The answer, in all statistical likelihood, is no because the architecture of wealth management at that scale routes capital through JPMorgan Private Bank, Goldman Sachs, and their institutional counterparts, none of which are African American-owned, and none of which recirculate deposits as loans into majority-Black communities at any meaningful rate. James built the I Promise School, which is genuine and admirable. The banking relationship is, by all available evidence, with institutions that have never demonstrated a reciprocal commitment to the communities James claims as his own.

Whether Jay-Z has made that commitment privately is unknown, though the fact that his sister-in-law Solange Knowles publicly announced she was banking Black suggests that the institutional consciousness exists within that immediate circle, making a private commitment at least plausible. No such contextual evidence exists for LeBron James, which is precisely what makes him the more instructive figure for this argument rather than the more culpable one. He is not an outlier. He is the norm. The forty million dollar slave who purchases his freedom and then banks with his former master is not a villain. He is a product of a system designed to make that outcome feel like financial prudence rather than institutional abandonment.

This is the sharpest edge of the Rhoden argument, and the one most carefully avoided in polite discourse about Black wealth. The community cannot simultaneously produce billionaires who manage their wealth through the same white-owned institutional infrastructure that has extracted capital from Black communities for a century, and expect Black-owned banks to remain solvent, competitive, and present. Tri-State Bank did not shrink to a single branch because white Memphis abandoned it. It shrank because the people with the most capacity to fund it including every Black professional, entertainer, and athlete who passed through Memphis, earned in Memphis, or claimed solidarity with Memphis did not route their financial relationships through it at the scale its survival required. At any given time this NBA season alone, a handful of African American players with combined salaries over $750 million passed through Memphis. King named Tri-State Bank from the pulpit because he understood that the institution’s viability was a function of community behavior, not community sentiment. The athlete who dismisses Memphis from a hotel room while banking at JPMorgan is not an outside critic. He is a participant in the condition he is describing. Sentiment without deposits is eulogy, not economics.

Tri-State Bank of Memphis was founded in 1946 by Dr. J.E. Walker and his son A. Maceo Walker, men who dreamed of a bank that would constructively change community conditions. It was that institution, built by that family, serving that city, that King named from the pulpit on April 3, 1968. Tri-State was not a symbol. It was a functioning financial intermediary, the circulatory infrastructure of Black Memphis’s economic life. It survived King. It survived the upheaval of the late twentieth century. And then, in 2021, it ceased to exist as an independent institution.

In October 2021, Tri-State Bank of Memphis completed its merger with New Orleans-based Liberty Bank and Trust Company, the largest African American-owned financial institution in the United States. Under the merger, the Tri-State name — long synonymous with providing financial opportunities for African Americans in Memphis — was retired. At the time of the acquisition, Tri-State was operating through a single office with approximately $105 million in assets and $95 million in deposits. LeBron James earns a reported $80–90 million a year in salary and endorsements, for perspective. The institution King had named from the pulpit, which had once operated through multiple locations across the city, had contracted to a single branch before being absorbed into a larger regional institution.

The acquisition was framed by both parties as a constructive consolidation, and in important respects it was. The merger created a financial institution with more than $1 billion in combined assets operating across ten states, and it expanded Liberty Bank’s lending limit for qualified borrowers from approximately $1.2 million to $5 million — a meaningful increase in the institution’s capacity to serve business borrowers in the Memphis market. Tri-State’s chairman acknowledged that the bank had reached a strategic crossroads: it either had to grow substantially or partner with another institution, and the board determined that combining forces with another Black-owned bank was preferable to remaining at a scale that limited its capacity to serve the community. That reasoning is correct as institutional strategy. Scale matters in banking. A $105 million community bank cannot make the same commercial loans, offer the same technology platforms, or absorb the same regulatory compliance costs as a $1 billion institution.

The consolidation logic King’s program implicitly required — pool the resources, aggregate the power — was ultimately what produced the Liberty-Tri-State merger. The irony is that the pooling King called for in 1968 happened in 2021, but through absorption rather than expansion. The result is that Memphis has African American banking infrastructure — Liberty Bank’s Memphis branch continues to operate — but no longer has a locally-rooted, locally-led African American-owned bank that has grown from and with the specific community it serves. That distinction is not trivial. Local institutional ownership generates a different quality of community investment than branch banking, however well-intentioned the parent institution.

According to the 2020 United States Census, Memphis is the second-largest majority-Black city in America, with over 400,000 Black residents constituting approximately 63 percent of its total population of 633,000. It is, by any demographic measure, an African American city. And yet the entire ecosystem of African American-owned banks in the United States holds approximately $6.7 billion in assets — 0.027 percent of total American bank assets — down from a peak of 0.2 percent in 1926, a tenfold relative decline. There are only 17 African American-owned banks remaining nationwide, and no new African American-owned bank has been started in 26 years. Memphis’s own trajectory from Tri-State’s founding in 1946 to its contraction to a single branch to its ultimate absorption in 2021 is a microcosm of that national decline, rendered in the specific city where King named the institution as the anchor of his economic program.

LeBron James’s Memphis comments are useful precisely because they dramatize the Rhoden-Jay-Z diagnosis without apparently being aware of it. James doubled down on his assessment that Memphis is a city he does not enjoy visiting, framing his evaluation entirely around the quality of his hotel accommodations and the general travel experience of a 41-year-old on a long NBA season. That is a consumer’s evaluation. He did not mention Tri-State Bank, which King named from the pulpit. He did not mention LeMoyne-Owen College, which has anchored Black Memphis educationally since 1862. He did not mention Orange Mound, the oldest planned African American community in the United States. He mentioned the Hyatt Centric.

That is precisely why institutional strategy cannot depend on individual millionaire consciousness. King’s program in Memphis named institutions, not individuals. He did not ask wealthy Black Memphians to feel differently about the city. He told the congregation where to put their deposits. The distinction between those two orientations — institutional strategy versus individual consciousness-raising — is the difference between building durable economic power and producing temporary cultural solidarity.

Orange Mound’s history illustrates the same principle from a neighborhood scale. Founded in 1890 as the nation’s first subdivision planned specifically for African Americans, it became one of the most economically and culturally dense Black communities in the United States by mid-century comparable, in the assessments of contemporaries, to Harlem. Its power derived not from the wealth of any individual resident but from the institutional density of the whole: homeownership, churches, schools, professional networks, entertainment venues, and commerce all operating within a self-reinforcing economic circuit. When that circuit broke in the 1960s and 1970s as younger residents and professionals migrated out in search of broader opportunity, the neighborhood’s cultural identity survived but its economic sovereignty did not. Homeownership declined, blight accumulated, and the institutional density that had made Orange Mound exceptional dissipated.

The Tri-State story is Orange Mound at the banking scale: an institution of extraordinary historical significance, built by the community, serving the community, that contracted over decades as the economic circuit it depended upon broke — professionals moving their banking relationships to larger downtown institutions, businesses unable to access the capital they needed at the scale they required, the deposit base shrinking until the bank could no longer sustain independent operations at the level the community needed. The merger with Liberty preserved the function — Black-owned banking in Memphis continues through Liberty’s local branch — but the local rootedness, the institutional identity, the specific claim to Memphis that Tri-State represented, was retired.

LeMoyne-Owen College, Memphis’s sole HBCU, has served the community as a source of academic formation and civic leadership since 1862 and it now carries, in institutional terms, a weight that Tri-State’s absorption makes heavier. An HBCU in a majority-Black city is not merely an educational institution. It is a potential anchor for an economic development strategy that could encompass workforce pipelines into Memphis’s anchored industries, research partnerships with FedEx and other major employers, real estate development in surrounding neighborhoods, and capital formation infrastructure serving the broader African American institutional ecosystem. Memphis is among the most important logistics hubs in the world. The economic activity that flows through it is enormous. The share of that activity intermediated through Black-owned institutions is a fraction of what it was when King named Tri-State from the pulpit.

King calculated that collectively, African Americans commanded an annual income exceeding thirty billion dollars more than the entire national budget of Canada at the time and argued that this collective wealth, if pooled through Black institutions, was power waiting to be activated. Adjusted for today’s figures, African American collective purchasing power exceeds 1.9 trillion dollars annually. The institutional infrastructure to capture even a meaningful fraction of that flow through Black-owned banks, HBCU endowments, Black-owned real estate, insurance, and investment structures is a fraction of what it was in 1926 by relative measure, and is shrinking in absolute terms as institutions like Tri-State are retired rather than expanded.

The Liberty-Tri-State merger was not a failure. It was a rational institutional response to a strategic dilemma that should never have been allowed to develop; the dilemma of a community bank that served an African American majority city but could not grow its deposit base or lending capacity fast enough to remain independently competitive. The correct lesson from that merger is not that Black banks are unviable but that building them requires the same coordinated community investment King outlined in 1968, and that no subsequent generation has executed at scale. The bank-in King called for was not a gesture. It was a funding strategy. Had it been executed and sustained across the decades since King’s assassination, Tri-State might have been the institution that acquired smaller banks rather than the institution that was absorbed.

King came to Memphis for sanitation workers earning $1.70 an hour. He was not interested in whether the city impressed visiting athletes. He was interested in whether working people could build organizations powerful enough to negotiate the terms of their own economic existence and he named specific institutions, by name, through which that power could be built. The institution he named is now a branch of another African American-owned bank. The city has a 164-year-old HBCU, the nation’s oldest planned African American subdivision, a 63 percent Black population, and one of the most strategically located economies in the United States. The Promised Land, King said, was visible from the mountaintop. Fifty-eight years later, the work of getting there remains, in Memphis and in every majority-Black American city facing the same structural gap, largely undone.

Editor’s Note

While the debate over LeBron James’s hotel preferences consumed Black social media for a news cycle, a more consequential assault on Memphis was advancing through federal court with considerably less celebrity attention. On April 15, 2026 days after James’s comments ignited civic indignation — the NAACP filed a federal lawsuit against Elon Musk’s xAI, alleging that the company had been operating 27 unpermitted gas turbines in Southaven, Mississippi, a suburb of Memphis, since at least August 2025, pumping formaldehyde, nitrogen oxides, fine particulate matter, and carbon monoxide into Black communities that already carry a cancer risk four times the national average. The power plant, built to feed xAI’s Colossus 2 data center complex, is projected to become the largest industrial source of nitrogen oxides in the greater Memphis area. Residents in the 38109 ZIP code described the situation without euphemism: living there was already a death sentence for Black Memphians before Musk’s machine arrived. xAI simply accelerated the sentencing.

Here is what that means in institutional terms. Elon Musk did not locate his unpermitted turbines in East Memphis or in the suburbs where his engineers live. He located them in Black Memphis, in communities that his lawyers, his lobbyists, and his political access calculated would lack the institutional firepower to stop him. That calculation was correct. The NAACP had to file a federal lawsuit. Earthjustice had to intervene. Organizations funded by donations and foundation grants had to carry the legal weight that a community with $1.9 trillion in collective annual purchasing power could not marshal on its own behalf, because that purchasing power has never been routed through the institutions that would have built the legal infrastructure to wield it. xAI is not an outlier. It is the logical endpoint of a century-long pattern in which majority-Black communities are treated as sacrifice zones precisely because their institutional circuits: the banks, the law firms, the political action committees, the endowed research centers have been allowed to atrophy while the wealth generated by and within those communities flows elsewhere.

LeBron James is worth an estimated billion dollars. His business partners, his fellow athletes, and the constellation of Black entertainers and executives who constitute the top percentile of African American individual wealth represent, in aggregate, a capital base that could fund a network of Black-owned environmental law firms, civil rights litigation shops, community development financial institutions, and HBCU-anchored research centers capable of meeting Elon Musk in federal court before the turbines are ever switched on not after months of illegal operation. That is not a fantasy. That is arithmetic. It is also a choice, and it is a choice that has not been made. Instead, Black Memphis fights for its institutional and environmental life with the resources of nonprofits and civil rights organizations while the men and women with the most capacity to change that calculus debate hotel quality on YouTube. King stood in Memphis and named a bank because he understood that the fight for economic dignity and the fight against environmental predation and the fight for political power are not separate fights. They are one fight, waged through institutions, sustained by capital, and won or lost on the strength of the infrastructure a community builds to wage it. Memphis is losing that fight right now not because its people lack courage or clarity, but because the institutional infrastructure King called into being was never fully built, and the generation with the greatest individual wealth in African American history has not yet decided to build it. The hotel was fine. The city is on fire.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

African American Tuition Valued At $64 Billion; But HBCUs Receive Less Than $6 Billion Annually

HBCUs are more than just schools, they are a home. – Chadwick Boseman

The paradox is impossible to ignore: African American communities consistently champion the importance of buying Black and supporting Black-owned businesses, yet when it comes to what may be the largest purchase of a lifetime, a college education, the overwhelming majority of Black families choose to invest those dollars elsewhere. This decision has profound consequences for the survival and strength of Historically Black Colleges and Universities, institutions that remain pillars of Black achievement, economic mobility, and community power.

As of Spring 2025, approximately 19.4 million students are enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities, with about 15 million undergraduates and over 3 million graduate students, according to data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center reported by NPR and BestColleges. This enrollment represents a recovery from pandemic-era declines, though numbers remain below 2010 peaks. African American students comprise roughly 13-15% of this total enrollment, representing approximately 2.5 to 2.9 million students across all institution types. When we calculate the economic value of these students based on current tuition rates, the numbers are staggering.

For the 2024-2025 academic year, public four-year institutions charge approximately $11,950 for in-state students and $31,880 for out-of-state students. Private nonprofit four-year schools average around $45,000 in tuition and fees. Public two-year colleges, which experienced a 3% enrollment increase in Fall 2024 according to USA Today reports, charge an average of $4,150 for in-district students. When you factor in room and board expenses, which averaged $13,310 for 2024-2025, the total cost of attendance reaches approximately $27,146 at public four-year institutions and $58,628 at private nonprofit four-year schools. Using a weighted average cost of attendance of approximately $26,000-$28,000 per year across all institution types, African American students and their families collectively spend approximately $64 billion annually on higher education. This represents enormous purchasing power—power that could transform Black institutions and communities if redirected strategically.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: of that $64 billion, African American students at HBCUs represent only about $6 billion in tuition revenue and that $6 billion is essentially all HBCUs have to work with. Unlike predominantly white institutions with massive endowments, substantial state funding, and robust donor bases, HBCUs are almost entirely tuition-dependent. This means that more than 90% of African American education dollars approximately $58 billion annually flow to institutions that were not built for us, by us, or with our advancement as their primary mission.

We talk extensively about supporting Black businesses, banking Black, and keeping dollars circulating in our communities. Yet when families sit down to make college decisions, often the single largest financial investment they will make outside of purchasing a home, the conversation shifts. Suddenly, the narrative becomes about rankings, prestige, resources, and opportunities at predominantly white institutions, while HBCUs are considered as backup options or dismissed entirely.

This pattern has devastating consequences. The approximately 222,300 African American students currently enrolled at HBCUs generate roughly $6 billion in tuition revenue and for most HBCUs, that tuition revenue represents the vast majority of their operating budgets. Unlike well-endowed predominantly white institutions that rely heavily on endowment returns, substantial state appropriations, federal research grants, and robust alumni giving, HBCUs are critically dependent on tuition dollars just to keep their doors open. When Black students choose to take their tuition dollars elsewhere, it directly threatens these institutions’ survival, limiting their ability to maintain programs, hire faculty, upgrade facilities, and provide student services.

The impact extends far beyond immediate operating budgets. Every student who chooses a predominantly white institution over an HBCU represents not just lost tuition revenue today, but lost philanthropic potential tomorrow. Alumni giving is the lifeblood of institutional endowments, and alumni tend to give most generously to the institutions they attended. When successful Black professionals graduate from predominantly white institutions, their alumni donations when they give at all flow back to those schools. Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and other elite institutions benefit from the success of Black graduates who might have attended HBCUs if those institutions had received even a fraction of the resources concentrated at the top of higher education’s hierarchy. Meanwhile, HBCU endowments remain comparatively microscopic, not because their graduates are less successful, but because there are fewer of them writing checks back to their alma maters.

This creates a vicious cycle. Smaller enrollment means less tuition revenue and for institutions operating almost entirely on tuition, this is an existential threat. Fewer graduates means smaller donor pools. Smaller donor pools mean smaller endowments. Smaller endowments mean even greater dependence on tuition revenue and less money for scholarships, facilities, and programs. Less competitive resources make it harder to attract students. And the cycle continues, generation after generation.

The wealth gap between HBCU endowments and those of predominantly white institutions is staggering and growing. Howard University recently became the first HBCU to cross the $1 billion endowment mark, a milestone that should be celebrated but instead highlights the crisis. The top 10 HBCU endowments combined total approximately $2.6 billion. Meanwhile, Harvard University’s endowment alone exceeds $50 billion, and the top 10 predominantly white institutions hold a combined $336 billion in endowments. The PWI-to-HBCU endowment gap stands at 129 to 1. Only one HBCU has an endowment over $1 billion, while 148 predominantly white institutions have endowments exceeding that mark. This disparity means that while HBCUs scrape by on tuition revenue with minimal endowment support, elite PWIs can offer generous financial aid packages funded by massive investment returns, making them appear more affordable even as they siphon Black student dollars away from Black institutions.

In barbershops and beauty salons, at family gatherings and community events, the conversation about economic empowerment is constant. We discuss the importance of circulation of Black dollars, the need to build generational wealth, and the imperative of supporting institutions that support us. Social media amplifies calls to buy Black, support Black-owned restaurants, use Black banks, and patronize Black professionals. Yet somehow, this collective consciousness evaporates when it’s time to choose a college. Parents who wouldn’t think twice about driving across town to support a Black-owned business will encourage their children to attend predominantly white institutions without seriously considering HBCU alternatives. Students who wear “support Black business” t-shirts apply exclusively to schools where they will be a small minority, where their history may be marginalized, and where their dollars will fund institutions with no historical commitment to Black advancement.

This isn’t about judgment these are rational decisions made by families trying to secure the best possible future for their children in a competitive world. The problem is that these individual rational choices, when aggregated, produce a collective outcome that weakens the very institutions most committed to Black success.

Consider what HBCUs accomplish with their fraction of African American education dollars. These institutions enroll approximately 10% of all African American college students but produce nearly 20% of Black graduates. They generate an even higher percentage of Black professionals in critical fields like engineering, medicine, and education. The majority of Black doctors, a disproportionate share of Black lawyers, and a significant portion of Black educators earned their degrees from HBCUs. HBCUs create environments where Black students see themselves in positions of leadership, where their history and culture are centered rather than marginalized, and where they build networks that last lifetimes. Research consistently shows that Black students at HBCUs report higher levels of engagement, stronger sense of belonging, and greater confidence in their abilities compared to Black students at predominantly white institutions.

They accomplish all of this while operating on budgets that would be considered inadequate at any predominantly white institution. They make miracles happen with limited resources, outdated facilities, and faculty salaries that make it difficult to compete for top talent. Imagine what they could do with just a fraction of that $64 billion currently flowing elsewhere.

The numbers tell a stark story. Approximately 292,500 students currently attend HBCUs, with African American students comprising about 76% of that enrollment roughly 222,300 Black students. At an average cost of attendance of $26,000-$28,000 annually, these students represent approximately $6 billion in tuition revenue flowing to HBCUs each year. Meanwhile, the remaining 2.3 to 2.7 million African American college students roughly 90% of all Black college students generate approximately $58 billion in tuition revenue for predominantly white institutions.

Think about that ratio: $6 billion staying in Black institutions versus $58 billion leaving them. This isn’t about equity or fairness this is about economic power and where we choose to deploy it. Every semester, Black families collectively make purchasing decisions that send nearly ten times more money to institutions with no historical commitment to Black advancement than to institutions that were literally built to educate us when no one else would.

The enrollment landscape is shifting. Spring 2025’s 19.4 million total enrollment shows growth in both undergraduate and graduate programs. Particularly significant is the 3% surge in community college enrollment in Fall 2024, suggesting that cost considerations are increasingly driving educational decisions. This cost consciousness presents an opportunity. As families become more aware of student debt burdens and question the return on investment of expensive predominantly white institutions, HBCUs offer compelling value propositions. But they can only compete if they have the resources to tell their stories effectively, maintain quality programs, and provide the support services today’s students expect.

The net price reality adds another dimension. While published tuition rates provide a baseline, actual costs after financial aid vary significantly, typically ranging from $17,000 to $25,000 depending on institution type. However, African American students often face higher net prices than their peers at the same institutions due to lower family wealth and less access to non-loan aid. This means Black families are stretching further financially, taking on more debt, and working more hours often to attend institutions with no particular commitment to Black student success.

The solution requires a fundamental shift in how we think about educational choices. White families don’t agonize over whether to “give HBCUs a chance” they automatically prioritize their own institutions. They attend state flagships, legacy schools where their parents and grandparents went, institutions that have accumulated centuries of wealth from their community’s investment. They don’t need to be convinced to support their own. Yet somehow, Black families have internalized a narrative that HBCUs are noble but limited, worth considering but not prioritizing, respectable but not prestigious. This is the mental colonization that costs us $58 billion annually.

We need to be as intentional about our education spending as we claim to be about supporting Black businesses. This means making HBCUs the default choice, not the backup plan. It means understanding that when white families send their children to their flagship state universities and legacy institutions, they’re not making a sacrifice they’re making an investment in institutional power that compounds over generations. Black families deserve the same mindset. The choice of where to spend education dollars is an economic decision with ramifications far beyond individual degree attainment. It’s about building institutional power that can withstand political and social headwinds.

Institutional strength matters. Strong HBCUs create jobs in Black communities, anchor local economies, generate Black wealth through employment and contracts, and serve as catalysts for community development. They provide platforms for Black intellectual leadership, preserve and advance Black culture, and create networks of mutual support that span generations and geographies. In an increasingly uncertain social and political environment, the importance of strong Black institutions becomes even more apparent. When external support proves unreliable, when political winds shift, when social progress reverses, communities need institutions they control and can depend on. HBCUs represent exactly that kind of institutional foundation.

The question isn’t whether HBCUs deserve support their track record speaks for itself. The question is whether African American families will align their spending decisions with their stated values around Black economic empowerment. That $64 billion represents power—power to build, strengthen, and sustain institutions that have proven their commitment to Black success. How we choose to deploy that power will determine whether HBCUs merely survive or truly thrive in the generations ahead.

The choice is ours. The power has always been ours. The question is whether we’ll use it.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Color Line Was Never Broken: MLB’s Jackie Robinson Day and the Permanent Absence of Black Ownership

Blacks are the only group of people in America who have been taught to invest their time, talents, and resources into other people’s businesses and institutions rather than their own.– Dr. Claude Anderson

Every April 15th, Major League Baseball dresses itself in the iconography of racial progress. Every player, coach, manager, and umpire in the league wears number 42, the retired number of Jackie Robinson, in a league-wide act of commemorative solidarity. Stadiums host ceremonies. The commissioner issues statements. The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum is quoted in the wire copy. This year marked the 79th anniversary of Robinson’s debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers, and the ritual was performed with its usual solemnity and precision. Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, offered the occasion’s defining sentiment: every player of color who now enjoys the sport owes it to this man. It was the kind of statement that lands well precisely because it is true and precisely because it forecloses the question that actually matters: what do the owners of the sport owe?

The answer, measurable across 79 years, is nothing. Because in the entire recorded history of Major League Baseball, there has never been a single African American principal owner of a franchise. Not one. The league that wraps itself annually in the image of the man who broke its color barrier has never permitted Black Americans to sit at the table where the real decisions are made and the real wealth is accumulated. Jackie Robinson Day, in this light, is not a celebration. It is a ritual performance of symbolism in the absence of substance, a ceremony that honors a labor breakthrough while quietly burying the ownership catastrophe that labor breakthrough produced.

Dr. Claude Anderson diagnosed this dynamic with clinical precision in Black Labor, White Wealth: The Search for Power and Economic Justice. Anderson’s central thesis is that African Americans have historically been incorporated into American economic structures as labor inputs essential to the production of wealth but systematically excluded from its ownership and accumulation. The pattern Anderson traces across centuries of American economic life finds one of its most vivid contemporary illustrations in professional baseball. In 1947, there were zero African American owners in Major League Baseball. In 2026, there are zero African American owners in Major League Baseball. The number has not moved in nearly eight decades of ceremonies, commemorations, and retired jerseys. Whatever integration accomplished for those who could play, it accomplished nothing for those who might own.

The financial stakes of that absence are not abstract. The average MLB franchise value entering the 2026 season is $3.17 billion, a 12 percent increase from the prior year. The New York Yankees are valued at $9 billion; the Los Angeles Dodgers at $8 billion. Thirty franchises, each a multigenerational wealth vehicle, each appreciating at rates that make even the highest player salaries look modest by comparison. The mathematics of ownership versus labor in professional sports is not complicated: franchises compound wealth over generations, while athletic careers end, often before age 35, and rarely produce the kind of capital base required to enter the ownership market. George Steinbrenner paid $10 million for the New York Yankees in 1973; the team is now valued at nearly $9 billion — a 900-fold increase. No player’s salary trajectory has ever approximated that kind of return. The wealth gap between Black athletes and the owners who profit from their labor is not a gap it is a chasm, and it has been widening for eight decades while baseball holds its annual ceremony.

What made this chasm possible was the structural transformation that Robinson’s entry into MLB initiated. Rube Foster, considered the father of Negro League Baseball, was insistent as early as 1910 that Black teams should be owned by Black men. The Negro Leagues were not merely a segregated alternative to the major leagues they were an ownership infrastructure, an economic ecosystem, a complex of jobs, investment, and community capital that functioned precisely because it was self-contained. Virtually all of the initial Negro League ownership was Black, according to Garrick Kebede, a Houston-based financial adviser and Negro League Baseball historian. When Robinson crossed the color line under Branch Rickey’s terms, he did not negotiate a merger. He negotiated a labor transfer. African American talent, the asset that had built and sustained the Negro Leagues, departed for a structure in which African Americans held no ownership stake, no board seats, no equity, and no decision-making authority. The Negro Leagues, stripped of their best labor, collapsed. The ownership infrastructure they represented was dismantled. What remained was the arrangement that has persisted ever since: Black labor generating wealth for white ownership, with the annual ceremony serving as the cultural lubricant that makes the arrangement palatable.

This publication has argued before that what African Americans celebrate when they celebrate Robinson’s debut is better understood as a miscelebration, an uncritical embrace of a “first” that, examined structurally, represented institutional dispossession rather than institutional advancement. The framework is not complicated. A community’s economic power derives not from its ability to supply labor to others’ institutions, but from its capacity to build, own, and control institutions of its own. The Negro Leagues were such an institution. Their destruction produced precisely the outcome that Dr. Anderson’s framework would predict: a permanently subordinate position within an economic structure controlled by others, with symbolic inclusion substituting for actual power.

The percentage of Black players on Opening Day rosters increased from 6.0 percent in 2024 to 6.2 percent in 2025 to 6.8 percent in 2026 — the first back-to-back annual increases in at least two decades. MLB has invested in developmental programs aimed at reversing the long decline of Black players in the sport, and the league has used this uptick as evidence of progress on Jackie Robinson Day. The framing is instructive in its evasions. At the apex of Black participation in MLB, the figure reached 18.7 percent in 1981. Today’s 6.8 percent, celebrated as a milestone, remains less than half that peak and remains, critically, a measure only of labor participation. The ownership figure has not changed. It is zero. It has always been zero. The developmental programs that produce more Black players produce more labor for an ownership class that has never included a single African American. Whatever the developmental intention, the structural outcome is the same as it has always been: more Black men supplying the asset that generates wealth for others.

This is not, it must be stressed, an argument against Black Americans playing baseball. It is an argument about what the celebration of their playing, in the absence of ownership, actually signifies. It signifies that the arrangement Branch Rickey designed in 1947 one in which Black labor would integrate the league while Black ownership was never contemplated has proven durable across nearly eight decades and shows no sign of structural challenge. The 30 franchise owners whose combined wealth now runs into the hundreds of billions of dollars conduct their business in owners’ meetings that have never included an African American voice with the authority that ownership confers. The decisions made in those meetings about labor rules, revenue sharing, market expansion, franchise relocation, broadcast deals are made entirely without African American ownership participation. This is not an oversight. It is the design of the arrangement that Robinson’s entry formalized.

The institutional lessons of this history extend well beyond baseball. The Negro Leagues offer a template not for nostalgia but for analysis: what does it take to build an economic ecosystem that retains capital within a community rather than exporting it to others? The answer, in the Negro Leagues as in other domains, was ownership. When the Kansas City Monarchs played, the revenue stayed within a structure where Black owners, Black managers, Black vendors, and Black communities captured the economic return on Black athletic talent. That structure was dismantled not by force, but by the gravitational pull of integration on terms that never included ownership as a condition.

The HBCU athletic ecosystem faces an analogous set of choices in the present. The temptation to pursue visibility and validation within structures owned and controlled by others (the Power Five conferences, the NCAA tournament apparatus) reproduces the 1947 logic at the college level. As this publication has examined in detail, the HBCU Power Five has a combined all-time record of 4-55 in the NCAA tournament, and the SWAC and MEAC combined typically earn no more than approximately $680,000 in tournament payouts, roughly $34,000 per school when distributed across conference members. The alternative: owning the tournament, controlling the broadcast rights, building an HBCU Athletic Association would produce less spectacle and more capital. It would reproduce, in athletic governance, the logic that Rube Foster understood a century ago: the economic return on Black talent should accrue to Black institutions.

The broader African American institutional ecosystem — Black owned public and private companies, Black financial institutions, professional associations, fraternal organizations, and HBCUs themselves — contains the capacity for the kind of coordinated ownership strategy that MLB has never permitted and that the Negro League era briefly demonstrated was possible. The question is not whether that capacity exists. It is whether the community’s leadership is willing to pursue ownership as a strategic objective rather than labor participation as a cultural achievement. Dr. Anderson’s framework demands that distinction. So does the arithmetic of 30 MLB franchises averaging $3.17 billion in value, every one of them owned by someone who is not African American, generating their returns on a sport whose very mythology of racial progress was built on the back of a Black man who received no ownership stake in exchange for making the mythology possible.

Every April 15th, the number 42 appears on every jersey in Major League Baseball. It is, in its way, an honest accounting. Forty-two is the number of a man whose labor the league appropriated, whose institutional infrastructure it dismantled, and whose memory it now rents annually for its own legitimacy. What would constitute actual progress is the number of African American principal owners in MLB. That number is zero. It has always been zero. Until it changes, Jackie Robinson Day is not a celebration. It is an invoice of unpaid, and accumulating interest.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.