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New Brief Warns Industrial Policy Rollbacks Threaten Black Workers’ Economic Mobility

July 31, 2025

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies has released a 16-page issue brief warning that federal industrial policy investments meant to benefit Black communities are being threatened by the Trump administration's elimination of diversity, equity and inclusion provisions and slowed funding disbursement. Authored by Dr. Gabrielle Smith Finnie, the report examines how the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, CHIPS and Science Act, and Inflation Reduction Act represented historic opportunities to increase Black access to quality jobs in growing industries like manufacturing, clean energy, and technology. Despite these laws including intentional equity components such as labor protections and apprenticeship incentives, many of these components are now being rolled back or underfunded, potentially limiting economic mobility for Black workers and communities.

Who is affected

  • Black workers and communities
  • Black-led and Black-allied organizations
  • Residents in high-poverty counties
  • Cities with large Black populations (Baltimore, Augusta, New Orleans, Raleigh)
  • Historically Black neighborhoods in Detroit
  • Prince George's County, Maryland (a majority-Black jurisdiction)
  • Communities with lower employment rates and below-median household incomes

What action is being taken

  • The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies is publishing research on industrial policy and its impact on Black communities
  • The Trump administration is eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in industrial policy legislation
  • Federal funding is being slowly dispersed, paused, or clawed back
  • The Joint Center is hosting virtual sessions with policy experts to provide information about funding pathways
  • Some cities are using existing funding for specific projects (Detroit's I-375 Community Reconnection Project, Reinvest Birmingham's workforce development)

Why it matters

  • These investments offer a window to increase Black workers' access to "good jobs" with family-sustaining wages
  • The programs have already reached over 99% of high-poverty counties
  • Cities with large Black populations were set to receive millions for infrastructure and workforce development
  • The funding could reconnect historically Black neighborhoods and reduce local pollution
  • Seventy percent of clean energy investments are going to counties with lower employment rates
  • Defunding these programs would reduce opportunities for Black workers to participate in the industrial sector

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The Washington Informer