Edited by HE News
The Context
The affordability gap — measured by housing costs, wage stagnation, and inflation exposure — now sits at its widest point in two decades for Black and Latino households, per Brookings data. This economic squeeze is eroding trust in institutions and reshaping voter sentiment in swing districts with substantial Latino populations.
The Takeaway
Corporate boards and executives tied to consumer-facing sectors should expect heightened scrutiny on wage policy and community investment. Latino voters’ economic pessimism is now a proxy-season flashpoint — DEI commitments without material wage action will read as hollow in the next cycle.
Source: Brookings





