Author Archives: hbcumoney

HBCU Construction: Revisiting Work Study & Trade Training

By William A. Foster, IV

Labor is the great producer of wealth; it moves all other causes. – Daniel Webster

We’ve all heard the stories as HBCU alum of the former slaves who initially upon attending their HBCU were involved in not only taking classes but also in the actual building of the HBCU. Their expertise as former blacksmiths and farmers on slave plantations allowed them to have a needed expertise to help build the initial buildings on our campuses. For these institutions and African America as a whole who were just getting its “start” in the 1870s and now charged with trying to close at that time a 300 year social, economic, and political gap there was significant benefit socially and economically in having students who could provide the initial labor to build the school. It created both pride in their new institution and a fiscal savings as these students typically not only provided the labor but in some instances made the bricks. One had to assume this was an amazing time to be a student. To see the birth of your own institution coming from your hands into buildings that would become the birthplace of African minds generations to come.

Today, the scene is much different. On almost every HBCU campus I’ve visited and even a few I’ve worked, the construction of new buildings is outsourced. Not only is it outsourced its virtually never outsourced to an African American construction company. The financing also almost never comes from an African Diaspora owned financial institution which why the establishment of the HBCU Credit Union is so vital.  Both of these points highlight a problem when it comes to circulation of our economic capital. Too often we forget about the business to business circulation and only seem to be focused on the consumer to business circulation. Now, certainly today’s student is different than that of our ancestors over 100 plus years ago in terms of upbringing and training. However, we have seen the over reliance on the DuBois model and not enough balance with the Washington model leaving us extremely vulnerable in down economies. That is to say our students should be flexible enough that they graduate with not only a degree of their mind but the ability to perform a trade with their hands. This balance can provide both a hedge in a down economy when white collar jobs get the brunt of the slashing or it can be additional income that one earns on the side. It can also be the impetus that spurs entrepreneurship into areas we are sorely under represented like construction.

The rising cost of education requires our schools become more creative on how work study is provided to our students. An average construction worker makes $29,211 annually which isn’t much for someone trying to support a family but it is the equivalent of four years worth of undergraduate Stafford Loans. Now imagine a student for four years earning $12,000 a year for four years working construction projects or other various infrastructure projects the university is engaged in. You’ve just created a $48,000 package in financial aid to start. Now at the end of the four years you have a student with no debt, potentially some savings, trained with a trade, armed with a degree, and a student with an even deeper social connection to the care of their university because it was the sweat from their brow that built it.

I do not want to suggest that we go on a building spree or that you don’t still need professional construction workers. I am suggesting that we need to use African American construction companies to increase our business to business circulation and require those companies hire some of our students. They themselves would provide the training to our students in conjunction with having lower cost labor for the project. It both saves the cost of the project to the school and increases the profits to the company. This is just the start of what needs to be part of a comprehensive plan to find more creative ways to decrease our students’ student loan burden and given HBCUs serious infrastructure needs this is a win-win for both student and HBCU as we expand and try to build up our endowments.

Asian American and European America both have a median net worth north of $95,000. African America’s median net worth is $2,170. The student loan debt burden is going to hurt us more than any in the generations to come if we do not get serious about finding ways to counter it. We cannot simply copy the “playbook” of our counterparts who have almost 50 times our wealth.

We have a chance to allow our students to add to the history of building ourselves up with our own two hands and mind. It’s a lesson from the past we desperately need to revisit.

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Fahrenheit 451: A Novel

Ray Bradbury’s internationally acclaimed novel Fahrenheit 451 is a masterwork of twentieth-century literature set in a bleak, dystopian future.

Guy Montag is a fireman. In his world, where television rules and literature is on the brink of extinction, firemen start fires rather than put them out. His job is to destroy the most illegal of commodities, the printed book, along with the houses in which they are hidden.

Montag never questions the destruction and ruin his actions produce, returning each day to his bland life and wife, Mildred, who spends all day with her television “family.” But then he meets an eccentric young neighbor, Clarisse, who introduces him to a past where people didn’t live in fear and to a present where one sees the world through the ideas in books instead of the mindless chatter of television.

When Mildred attempts suicide and Clarisse suddenly disappears, Montag begins to question everything he has ever known. He starts hiding books in his home, and when his pilfering is discovered, the fireman has to run for his life.

HBCU Money™ B-School: Research Expenditure

Specialized and restricted-access networks dedicated to support universities, colleges, and other education and research institutions and their affiliates, as distinct from the commodity Internet. R&E networks are operated at the national, regional, and state levels, with numerous interconnections around the world. Institutions served by one or more R&E networks typically have a direct connection to the commodity Internet as well.

Learn more terms at http://www.educause.edu

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Who Financed Hitler: The Secret Funding of Hitler’s Rise to Power

Called “one of the most useful and illuminating studies of Nazism” by The New Yorker, this highly acclaimed work of history unravels the secret financial web which Hitler spun across Europe and around the globe to bankroll his dream of world domination.

The 91st Anniversary Of The Black Wall Street Massacre

By William A. Foster, IV

Remember that life is neither pain nor pleasure; it is serious business, to be entered upon with courage and in a spirit of self-sacrifice. – Alexis de Tocqueville

This is the first year I’ve had a chance to remember Black Wall Street on the very day that in a 12 hour battle a model community of American aspiration would be destroyed. It has always been at the heart of my economic and institutional development beliefs. I once railed on twitter that I wish Spike Lee would make the movie of Black Wall Street. Although, I dare say he’d run into even more problems than he did with Malcolm X. The threat of social and economic power coming to African America is much more frightful than one man.  I’ve even griped that my issues with Dr. Cornel West and his ilk  who want to speak “truth to power” is they ignore the model of the greatest moment in African America’s social and economic history as well as the very basis of how capitalism works. Our own fault for listening to a theology professor instead of our own economist. I always say there is “No Country for African American Economist” in the African American community. We’d rather speak to power than build our own. The story of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, OK is one of those moments where if we’d learn from history it would be worth repeating it. Instead, we’ll ignore our history to our own peril.

Many of us have a hard time imagining a place where African Americans owned and controlled as Mike House documents in his research “twenty-one restaurants, thirty grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, a half dozen private airplanes and even a bus system”. Just this economic power alone in one centralized place makes one realize how far we have fallen. Many of us simply see nominal gains in income and assume we have progressed. Not realizing that capitalism’s power and reward ultimately rest in the institutions you own and control.

I have tired of the marches. I have tired of the “leaders”. I have tired of the speeches. I have even tired of my own writings. I am tired of telling us we are poorer today than we were in 1921. I have tired of our dependency on liberal ideology that says wait for a government to do the right thing by us. The government does the right thing by those who have the economic means to grease it. We simply need to build communities that we control and own. We need to build institutions that we control and own in those communities. We need to build social, economic, and political partnerships with Africa just like every other group in this country has with its ancestral homeland which creates a global power. We then need to use that social and economic capital to influence the political system to protect our social and economic interest. This is what made Black Wall Street so powerful and why it ultimately had to be destroyed. They were on the verge of leveraging their influence into the political system which would have allowed them to control Oklahoma. Can you imagine that?

We have HBCU communities that already are built to become Black Wall Street reinvented. Over 100 of them. Less talking. More building.

For the entirety of the events of June 1, 1921 just click the date.