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Articles

COVID-19, Black jurisdictions, and budget constraints: how fiscal footing shapes fighting the virus

Pages 836-850 | Received 16 Jul 2020, Accepted 24 Nov 2020, Published online: 05 Jan 2021
 

ABSTRACT

In the United States (U.S.), most reports regarding racial disparities in incidence and death from COVID-19 understate the importance of majority-Black local jurisdictions’ fiscal capacity in shaping African Americans’ resilience during the pandemic and majority-Black locales’ economic trajectories afterward. Black households and jurisdictions manage legacy and ongoing racialized capitalism. My data are fieldwork findings from a 2017 and 2018 study of the U.S. county with the highest concentration of middle-class African Americans, Prince George’s County (PGC), Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C., alongside government reports on how D.C.-area counties experience COVID-19 fallout. I find PGC’s fragile fiscal state prior to the coronavirus means it weathers harsher consequences from COVID-19 than two neighbouring counties with significantly smaller Black populations. My analysis explicates how layers of racial disadvantage compound across time, region, and level of social organization.

Acknowledgements

I gratefully acknowledge support from the Columbia Population Research Center (CPRC), which is supported under award P2CHD058486. Special thanks go to Andrew Rundle and James Quinn of CPRC for creating a map of the D.C. region displaying demographic differences.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

I gratefully acknowledge support from the Columbia Population Research Center (CPRC), which is supported under award P2CHD058486. Special thanks go to Andrew Rundle and James Quinn of CPRC for creating a map of the D.C. region displaying demographic differences.

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