(ThyBlackMan.com) “The economic distress of America’s inner cities may be the most pressing issue facing the nation. The lack of businesses and jobs in disadvantaged urban areas fuels not only a crushing cycle of poverty but also crippling social problems such as drug abuse and crime… A sustainable economic base can be created in the inner city, but only as it has been created elsewhere: through private, for-profit initiatives and investment based on economic self-interest and genuine competitive advantage.” Michael E. Porter, The Competitive Advantage of the Inner City, Harvard Business Review, May-June 1995.
Yes, nearly twenty years ago another call for a little common sense was put forth regarding the problem of America’s inner cities. Today, we have the same questions, the same issues, and many of the same folks running around trying to get elected by offering to change things for the people who reside in what Dr. Ron Daniels calls, “America’s Dark Ghettos.” We have talking heads misleading us on what it takes to make the appropriate changes necessary for our collective growth, all the while their pockets are being filled and ours are being emptied.
We also have shysters and hucksters running from city to city declaring Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! and playing on our emotions with MLK quotes, still asking us to keep his dream alive. In other words, they want us to remain asleep while they rake in the dollars from their all-talk and no-results protestations.
What a naïve and childlike people we are to be held captive by folks we call leaders, who have been doing and saying the same things for decades with no commensurate collective benefits for Black people. As Booker T. Washington once said, “There are some Negroes who don’t want the patient to get well.” We should be ashamed of ourselves. Sure, many Black people are doing quite well, individually, but far more are trapped in a generational cycle of poverty; and while personal choice and responsibility have led to many of their problems, their children had no choice in the matter. They are suffering the most from our dysfunction and lack of common sense when it comes to economic empowerment.
Michael Porter’s words are not unique, and his prescription for success is not new. Our forebears demonstrated how to empower themselves economically many years ago, and they did it under the worst of circumstances. They were not perfect; they were not educated; and they were not affluent. But they endured hardships and worked tirelessly with the understanding that it was up to them to take care of their children, and it was their responsibility to determine the direction of their own lives.
The key words in Porter’s quote are “economic self-interest and genuine competitive advantage.” Black people, especially at the ballot boxes across this nation have abdicated the authority, power, and reasoning we once had with our votes. All too often we simply cast votes, not in our own self-interest, but as though we are voting in some local popularity contest. All a politician has to do to get our vote is hold our baby or show up at our church or eat a rib with us. Politics is about self-interest, the kind that Porter’s words speak about and the kind demonstrated by our ancestors. How can your vote be powerful if you simply give it away without reciprocity?
As for “competitive advantage,” Black people in this country have several business niches from which we could grow our collective economy. Look at the products we buy, the foods we eat, and the services we use. Look at the high concentration of Black people in various cities, veritable economic enclaves themselves, except right now our dollars are going to someone else’s business, and not to our own. One problem is that many of us look at ourselves as being “competitively disadvantaged” and, thus, play into the self-fulfilling prophecy of not having the ability to open, support, and grow more businesses in the very neighborhoods where we live.
Personally, I am currently working with Dr. Victor Garcia, a noted pediatric surgeon in Cincinnati, Ohio, who took it upon himself to explore the reasons for the ever-growing number children requiring emergency surgery for gunshot wounds; he wondered what he could do to prevent it. He knew a great deal of the crime in our town was the result of poverty, hopelessness, and drugs. He also knew that by creating sustainable businesses in the inner city to employ our youth, at least some would be deterred from crime and drugs. Dr. Garcia understands what “economic self-interest and competitive advantage” are all about and is working hard to bring about change through sound economic principles.
Collaborating with the likes of William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears, Michael Porter, and other local supporters, he established Core Change, an organization dedicated to designing and executing transformative business models within the urban core (see: http://www.corechangecincy.com ) through which we can have our own Jobs! Jobs! Jobs!
Dr. Garcia is definitely working outside of his lane in an effort to make a real difference in the lives of our people. But as Michelle Alexander recently reflected on her work on mass incarceration, “I’m getting out of my lane. I hope you’re already out of yours.”
Written By James E. Clingman
Official website; http://www.blackonomics.com/
“The lack of businesses and jobs in disadvantaged urban areas….” Business owners find it very difficult dealing w/ residents in urban areas. Some years ago while working at a convience store, a black male suggested that I help him rob the store. Which wasn’t even happening. To be on the safe side, I told my supervisor and he called the police. Just in case dude decided to rob the store, and I worked straight 11-7 am, the police frequently patroled the area. Luckily, he didn’t rob the store, but he did steal some items a couple of times. Anyway, there was no way in hell I was going to prison for robbing the very store where the management was gracious enough to hire me.
Urban residents want everything for free or they’ll use the five finger discount. And if thats not bad enough, they display the worst attitudes towards business owners and employees. Even their children are disrespectful and the adults encourage it.
A KFC closed down in my area when a female employee helped her boyfriend rob the restaurant.
Many of the black owned businesses in urban areas are a front for the purchase of drugs and weapons. What sensible person wants to shop in such a place?
Then there are the non-blacks who do own/operate businesses in urban areas. They’re not able to hire blacks b/c they employ their own family members. Thats how income/money stays in the family. Non-blacks are not obligated to hire black people just b/c they are located in an urban area. They are there to not only make money but to provide necessary items for everyday life. If it weren’t for them, blacks would be in trouble.
These disadvantaged blacks are their own worst enemy. To themselves and each other. Entire communities are covered in disunity and dishonesty. Hot ghetto mess best describes them. They represent the nigger/nigga sub-culture in black communities. They should be ashamed of themselves, but they’re not b/c ain’t no shame in their game.