The central story of the Covid-19 pandemic is one of health inequity. Black Americans have experienced higher rates and more severe cases than white Americans, and overall Covid-19 has been more prevalent among people of color. The roots of these inequities are not new; they lie in a long history of marginalization and disenfranchisement dating back centuries. Black Americans in particular live shorter, sicker lives than do white Americans.
While there has been much discussion of Black-white health disparities over recent decades, the solutions that are regularly proposed involve efforts to improve the health care system on its own. But this is not enough. The Biden administration can work toward rectifying fundamental health inequities by moving us toward Black reparations. Reparations can take many forms, ranging from ideas like baby bonds to cash transfers to adults, either of which would at least help to improve the current state of affairs. The Biden administration can, early in its tenure, establish a high-level commission to assess the best approach to implement Black reparations, to conduct return-on-investment analyses and to make the case to the country that we will not, in any foreseeable future, narrow health inequities without some form of Black reparations.
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