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Let’s close the digital divide once and for all for Black communities

Since digital technologies first emerged about 30 years ago, Black Americans have trailed in terms of access. This “digital divide” is real, it’s important and we can do better. 

According to our analysis of data from the American Community Survey, 40 percent of Black Americans do not have high-speed, fixed broadband at home, compared to 28 percent of whites. In rural areas of the south with significant Black populations, white households are more than half as likely to have broadband, and in some cities, such as Baltimore and Chicago, the disparity is even greater. 

The digital divide has real-life consequences. Take education. 

During the pandemic, students in majority-Black schools suffered more learning loss than those in majority-white ones. In the workforce, the digital divide means that Black Americans are less likely to have the skills needed to excel in the modern and emerging economy. Black Americans accounted for less than 8 percent of digital workers in 2020, much less than their representation in the workforce (13 percent). Given that tech jobs are higher-paying and growing faster, narrowing the digital divide is a critical strategy to improve job quality, close income gaps and broaden opportunities.  

And that matters: Black families have one-eighth of the wealth of white ones, and the median annual wage of Black workers is about 30 percent less. The racial wealth gap is not going to diminish, or racial equity to advance, without narrowing the digital divide.  


There is reason for optimism: There has already been progress and the resources are available. The 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated $65 billion to improve broadband access and digital equity. 

But while money is necessary, it is not enough: It needs to be spent with purpose and precision. Five principles can help:  

That past does not have to be the future. Closing the digital divide is possible — and necessary — to build sustainable and inclusive growth that can benefit all Americans.   

Danielle Hinton is an associate partner in McKinsey & Company’s Washington, D.C. office. John B. Horrigan is a senior adviser to McKinsey, also based in Washington.