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Race and Consumption: Black and White Disparities in Household Spending
Abstract
Differences in consumption patterns are usually treated as a matter of preferences.
In this article, the authors examine consumption from a structural perspective and
argue that black households face unique constraints restricting their ability to acquire
important goods and services. Using data from the Consumer Expenditure Surveys, the
authors examine racial differences in total spending and in spending on major categories
of goods and services (food, transportation, utilities, housing, health care, and
entertainment). The authors also capture heterogeneous effects of racial stratification
across class by modeling racial consumption gaps across household income levels. The
results show that black households tend to have lower levels of total spending than
their white counterparts and that these disparities tend to persist across income
levels. Overall, these analyses indicate that racial disparities in consumption exist
independently of other economic disparities and may be a key unexamined factor in
the reproduction of racial inequality.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13809Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Lisa A. Keister
Professor of Sociology
Lisa A. Keister is professor of sociology and public policy at Duke University and
an affiliate of the Duke Network Analysis Center and the Duke Population Research
Initiative. Her current research focuses on organization strategy, elite households,
the processes that explain extremes in wealth and income inequality, and on group
differences in the intergenerational transfer of assets. She has been focusing on
the causes and consequences of net worth poverty recently with colleagues from the

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