The record one-year surge in household incomes across the United States boosted Minnesota families. But mostly white ones.
Minority households in Minnesota failed to share in the gains, census numbers out Thursday showed, and the state's deep and persistent racial disparities in income actually worsened in 2015.
This same census report last year showed such a steep dive in black household income that Gov. Mark Dayton created an office to tackle the inequities, with the Legislature committing $35 million to the effort.
"We're still home to this unfortunate paradox," said Craig Helmstetter, senior research manager at the Wilder Foundation in St. Paul. "We have this really high quality of life overall but it's unfortunately not shared by all parts of our population."
The American Community Survey 2015, released Thursday, shows that Minnesota household income jumped 3 percent last year, to $63,488. The $2,000 gain was the biggest one-year increase since 2006, and it pushed the state's median household income to pre-recession levels.
The state's poverty rate, already among the lowest in the country, fell by more than a full percentage point.
Yet black, Asian, Hispanic and American Indian median household incomes in the state did not rise in a statistically meaningful way. Minnesota's black median household income has hovered around $30,000 for several years, less than half the white median household income last year of $66,979.
Likewise, black Minnesotans remain unemployed at nearly three times the rate of white Minnesotans.