By Fanta Traore, Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman, and Sandile Hlatshwayo | The Afro

Shortly following the inauguration, Janelle Jones, former Managing Director of Groundwork Collaborative, announced that she would be appointed as Chief Economist at the Department of Labor, making her the first African American woman to hold the post. And Stacey Abrams, who played a major role in Biden’s victory, is an alumna of Spelman College, where she majored in interdisciplinary studies combining her interests in political science, sociology, and economics. What Harris, Jones, and Abrams have in common is that they were educated by economics departments at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs).
As noted by the Department of Education, HBCUs were established to serve the educational needs of Black Americans. Prior to the time of their establishment, and for many years afterwards, Blacks were generally denied admission to traditionally white institutions. As a result, HBCUs became the principal means for providing postsecondary education to Black Americans. Howard University, affectionately known as the Mecca of Black Excellence, is known for producing many of the nation’s first powerful figures who advanced society at large, including the first African American to be elected to the Senate, the first African American mayor of New York City, the first female Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, the first Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, and the first Black woman to cast a vote in a national election. HBCUs continue to produce today’s powerful figures: Keisha Lance Bottoms, the Mayor of Georgia, is a graduate of FAMU; the only Black woman CEO of a Fortune 500 company, Rosalind Brewer, is an alumna of Spelman College; the first Black person and woman to be elected attorney general of New York went to Howard University School of Law.
If we look in particular at Harris’s chosen major, economics, we see that recent years have brought the field of study a reckoning with sexual harassment, gender discrimination, and anti-Black racism, mirroring broader public discourse. The absence of Black and brown women in economics is stark across spaces economists inhabit the most power: public policy, financial services, technology, and academia.
Black women missing from economics is a unique problem, one that has tangible effects for our national and global economies as well as our political elections. Economic crises tend to harm women of col[1]or more than other groups. If our nation’s central bankers had more trained Black women at the table offering their perspective and expertise on the economy, policymakers could potentially identify warning signs earlier and enact concrete action to address potential economic issues sooner. This demonstrates why economic ideologies championed by economists of color are critical to how we move forward in addressing economic empowerment for the most marginalized communities in America. Economist Janelle Jones’ concept of “Black Woman Best” says that everyone benefits from economic policies that center Black women.
In 2018, two of us, Fanta and Anna, co-founded the Sadie Collective, named in honor of Dr. Sadie Alexander. Our organization is the first of its kind to uniquely address the pipeline and pathway problem for Black women in economics and related fields. With our team, made up of entirely young Black women, we are helping to foster a resource-rich community that empowers and equips women who look like us to become women who lead like Kamala Harris and Stacey Adams. As Harris and Adams have demonstrated with their leadership, we believe that Black women in these fields are uniquely equipped to answer questions that lie at the intersection of economics, policy, finance, and data science at the highest levels of leadership globally.
Through one historic election, we saw how Black women majoring in economics and related fields at HBCUs changed the course of history because they were empowered and equipped with an understanding of our world that informed how they chose to meet the current moment. Because of their identities, associated life experiences as Black women, and HBCU educations, Harris, Abrams, Jones, and countless others are ushering in all-important insights into criminal justice reform, voter disenfranchisement, immigration policy, educational reform, health care coverage and affordability, and more.

