New report provides baseline of social, economic indicators in N.S. Black community - Action News
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Nova Scotia

New report provides baseline of social, economic indicators in N.S. Black community

Leaders from Nova Scotia's Black community gathered Wednesday to celebrate the completion of the first African Nova Scotian Prosperity and Well-BeingIndex. It was a three-year initiative to measure social and economic indicators in the African Nova Scotian and Black immigrant communities from a Black perspective.

'What doesn't get measured,doesn't get changed,' says Irving Carvery

A middle aged man is shown smiling at the camera after speaking with reports about his work on the African Nova Scotian Economic Index.
Irvine Carvery is the co-chair of the Road to Economic Prosperity advisory council. (Kathleen McKenna/CBC)

A three-year initiative to measure social and economic indicators in African Nova Scotian and Black immigrant communities in the province showed continuing gaps in housing, wages and employment, prompting callsfor more Black-led economic development and data collection.

The African Nova Scotian Prosperity and Well-BeingIndex, released Wednesday at the Halifax Central Library,isbelieved to be the first of its kind in Canada.

The index was developed as part of the African Nova Scotian Road to Economic Prosperity, aneconomic development strategy createdand led by the province's Black community.

Using the most recently available data, the index is meant to serve as a baseline of the social and economic disparitiesthat exist between the Blackcommunity and the rest of the province, as well asgaps in data and research.

"The index is a measuring tool," said Irvine Carvery, co-chair of the Road to Economic Prosperity advisorycouncil. "What doesn't get measured,doesn't get changed."

6 key areas studied

The index covered six key areas: population, income, housing, education, labour and well-being.

Among its findings, the index saidthe rising cost of housing ishaving a disproportionate impact on Black communities because of the gap in financial outcomes that exists between those communities and the larger population.

While the index saidBlack Canadians face higher unemployment rates than white people,it noted the gap is narrowing in Nova Scotia.It also saidaverage Black incomes are lower than non-minority incomes, though that gap also appears to be getting smaller, particularly for women.

It found 43 per cent of Black people earnless than $20,000 a year, compared to 31 per cent of non-minority Nova Scotians. On average, Black Nova Scotians earnbetween 14 per cent and 27 per cent less than their white counterparts.

The average after-tax income in 2020 for Black Nova Scotianmales, for example, was $10,120 lower than the average for non-visible minoritymales.

As of 2021, Nova Scotia's Black population was 28,220. The index said20.4 per cent of those people identified as Black immigrants.

A black woman is shown speaking to journalists.
Carolann Wright is the executive director of the Road to Economic Prosperity team at the Halifax Partnership, a local economic development organization. (Kathleen McKenna/CBC)

Carolann Wright, executive director of the Road to Economic Prosperity team at the Halifax Partnership, said the statistics show where initiatives are needed to improve economic conditions. She saidone of the most important recommendations is to increase African Nova Scotian participation in census data collection.

"If a government doesn't have accurate statistics, it is not going to create accurate programs for the community," she said.

Little historicaldata

The data in the index was compiled through partnerships with Statistics Canada and Dalhousie University.

Carvery said historically, little data has been collected on the African Nova Scotian population. The data sets provided by StatsCan, for instance, only went back three generations.

"We need our own sources of data. We need desegregated data that's reflective of the African Nova Scotian community," he said.

Unlike now, Carverysaid data collection was not a priority for past generations of African Nova Scotians

Two women are shown presenting to an audotorium at the Halifax Library.
The African Nova Scotian Prosperity and Well-Being Index was presented Wednesday at the Halifax Regional Library. The index was created to compile and interpret data from a Black perspective. (Kathleen McKenna/CBC)

"Our struggle was to gain our civil rights [for] today's generation. Even with the index, if you look at the numbers around education, you can see where we have increased our numbers in terms of university education," he said.

"People are beginning to look at our situation through a different lens."

The index found that31.8 per centof Black Nova Scotian adults between the ages of 25 and64 hold a university degree, compared to the non-minority population share of 27.1 per cent.

Going forward

This year's index will form the basis of annual indexes, and its information will be used as the African Nova Scotian and Black immigrant communities work to achieve the goals of the Road to Economic Prosperity strategy.

A young black woman smiles at the camera after speaking to reporters about her work on a youth council for African Nova Scotian economic prosperity.
Shekara Grant is the co-chair of the youth council for the Road to Economic Prosperity. (Kathleen McKenna/CBC)

Shekara Grant, co-chair of the youth advisory council for the group, said self-determination is very important when it comes to data collection.

"I have a parent that's an immigrant, but on my other side, I'm an eighth-generation African Nova Scotian. If I were to be counted in the census, I would not be counted as thirdgeneration or more because they count based on immigration status first," she said.

"So I think the actual success of this will be the longitudinal study. So what does this index look like, you know, over the next 10, 20 to 30 years, and have these determinants changed? That will be the question."


For more stories about the experiences ofBlackCanadians from anti-Blackracism to success stories within theBlackcommunity check outBeingBlackinCanada, a CBC projectBlackCanadianscan be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)