Systems and Economic History | Generational Wealth Gaps Don’t Happen by Accident
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In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines one of the most misunderstood subjects in modern public discourse: Black economic development, historical wealth-building, and the institutional systems that repeatedly disrupted economic progress across generations.
Rather than beginning with struggle alone, this discussion traces the structured economic systems of ancient African civilizations, the rebuilding efforts that followed emancipation, the rise of Black economic communities in America, and the policies, violence, and institutional interventions that altered those trajectories over time.
Topics include: • Ancient African trade systems and economic influence • Black wealth building after slavery • Tulsa, Rosewood, and the destruction of economic centers • Redlining, housing discrimination, and federal policy • Urban renewal and the dismantling of Black business districts • Economic isolation and inner-city development • The long-term impact on ownership, wealth, and opportunity today
This discussion examines how historical systems, institutional decisions, economic incentives, and policy structures continue shaping outcomes across generations.
The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis.
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