Why Trump's stoking of white racial resentment is effective – but makes all working-class Americans worse off
- Written by Donald T. Tomaskovic-Devey, Professor of Sociology; Director, Center for Employment Equity, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Many white men say[1] they feel[2] threatened[3] by the increasing presence and success of minorities in the workplace.
As social[4] scientists[5], we wondered if there is any evidence to support this perceived economic threat, a perception that can provide fertile ground for current rounds of racist and xenophobic political messaging.
Our work at the Center for Employment Equity[6] at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, involves using Equal Employment Opportunity Commission data to explore workplace discrimination and diversity in states and cities across the U.S. Our aim is to discover and promote more equitable workplaces.
In our most recent report, called “Race, States and the Mixed Fate of White Men[7],” we examined the connection between minority populations and the job prospects of white men in private-sector companies.
White male privilege
Social scientists generally agree on three research findings about white men in the U.S. and the notion that they are losing their unearned but expected racial privileges.
First, white men at every education level are more likely than women and non-Asian minorities to get access to higher-wage jobs[8].
Second, while wages of average working-class people in the U.S. have stagnated in recent decades[9], and economic insecurity has grown, earnings for middle- and upper-class jobs – which are dominated by educated whites – have soared.
A third and more recent finding is that working-class white men are the group that is most racially resentful and most opposed to further immigration[10]. This finding is based on analyses of survey data of the whole U.S. population examining both voting behavior and attitudes toward blacks and immigrants, zeroing in on President Donald Trump’s core supporters and the content of his political messaging to them.
This resentment probably explains why working-class whites, particularly men, are so receptive[11] to President Trump’s anti-immigrant and racist messages – and why he targets them[12].
We suspected that the reception to racist and xenophobic messages might be a reflection of a growing competition between working-class whites and minority men for increasingly insecure, low-wage jobs.
White men dominate the executive suite
In our study, we compared different racial groups’ share of specific occupations with their percentage of their state’s workforce. In other words, we wanted to see how over- or underrepresented white, black and Hispanic men were in various jobs.
In general, we found that while some white men are prospering in executive and managerial roles, there is another group of white men with very different employment experiences.
At the top end of the labor market, our data showed that in every state, white men were overrepresented in executive and managerial jobs. But this white male privilege varied substantially by state. White men got even more of the top jobs in states with larger minority populations.
Texas, where minorities make up a third of the labor force and white men slightly more at 37%, was the most extreme. White men held 85% of private-sector executive jobs, making them overrepresented in top jobs by 138%.
Other states with sizable minority populations, such as California, New Mexico and Mississippi, similarly showed white men are especially advantaged in their control of the executive suite.
We found the same, if less extreme, pattern of white male advantage in private-sector management jobs.
Working-class competition
The pattern shifts dramatically, however, when we look at lower-paid working-class jobs.
These include machine and factory operatives, manual laborers and service occupations. Such jobs typically require high school degrees or less and tend to pay low wages. We find that more than half of these jobs pay below the living wage target of US$15 per hour.
In every state, black men were overrepresented as machine operatives, manual laborers and service workers. Hispanic men were overrepresented in machine operative and manual labor jobs in every state except Hawaii.
Working-class overrepresentation for minority men tends to be higher in states with small minority populations[13], such as Vermont, Maine and North Dakota.
But we wanted to get more directly at the degree to which working-class white men are competing for the same low-wage jobs as minority men. So we compared the number of black, Hispanic, Native American and native Hawaiian men performing operative, laborer or service jobs versus white men. In all states except Hawaii, these minorities are mostly black or Hispanic or both.
We found that in almost all states, working-class white men were competing for jobs with relatively large groups of minority men. And in 20, there were more minority men in these working-class jobs than white men. This pattern was most extreme in Washington, D.C. and California, where there were more than three minority men in these jobs for every white man.
Improving working-class lives
This does not mean that working-class whites have lost their entire racial advantage, but rather that it is more tenuous and exists in a context of wage stagnation and increased insecurity.
Research[14] shows that many whites attribute being stuck in low-wage, insecure jobs to competition with minorities but are unaware of the larger trends of wage stagnation and growing insecurity for all working-class jobs.
So it is perhaps not surprising that this combination of visible competition and misplaced blame creates fertile conditions for stoking racial and immigrant resentment, particularly at a time of stagnating incomes[15], falling unionization[16] and a growing lack of job security[17] – problems that have done the most harm to the working class, regardless of race or national origin.
Perhaps it is politically simpler to encourage workers to see each other as rivals, but policy solutions[18] that will actually make a difference need to focus on shared economic security – rather than blame games.
References
- ^ say (www.npr.org)
- ^ they feel (www.vox.com)
- ^ threatened (www.newsweek.com)
- ^ social (www.umass.edu)
- ^ scientists (scholar.google.com)
- ^ Center for Employment Equity (www.umass.edu)
- ^ Race, States and the Mixed Fate of White Men (www.umass.edu)
- ^ higher-wage jobs (www.epi.org)
- ^ have stagnated in recent decades (doi.org)
- ^ racially resentful and most opposed to further immigration (www.cambridge.org)
- ^ so receptive (www.sociologicalscience.com)
- ^ he targets them (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
- ^ small minority populations (www.governing.com)
- ^ Research (www.russellsage.org)
- ^ stagnating incomes (doi.org)
- ^ falling unionization (www.doi.org)
- ^ growing lack of job security (www.doi.org)
- ^ policy solutions (www.epi.org)
Authors: Donald T. Tomaskovic-Devey, Professor of Sociology; Director, Center for Employment Equity, University of Massachusetts Amherst