Nielsen: African-Americans Upending Stereotypes in Education, Income, Media and More

New study features special focus on growing affluent black population

WASHINGTONSept. 17, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Nielsen released Increasingly Affluent, Educated and Diverse: African-American Consumers - the Untold Story, the fifth installment in its Diverse Intelligence Series. This new report is inclusive of insights about affluent Black consumers with annual household incomes of $75,000 and higher and upends outdated stereotypes about African-Americans, from education and income to media consumption and social engagement. The report was released at a press conference during the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Inc.'s 45th Annual Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C.
Increasingly Affluent, Educated and Diverse: African-American Consumers - the Untold Story explores the evolution of upper-income Black Americans as the population continues to grow and change rapidly. At 45.7 million strong [1], the nation's Black population grew at 17.7% from 2000 to 2014 --- 35% faster than the total population and double the 8.2% growth rate of the White population. The growth rate of the Black population is partly attributed to the surge in Black immigration from the CaribbeanAfrica and some European countries, making the overall population incredibly diverse. The number of foreign-born Blacks in the U.S. has quadrupled since 1980, accounting for 3.8 million of the nation's Black population. Foreign-born Blacks are contributing to increased incomes in the African-American community: their median household incomes are 30% higher than U.S.-born Blacks.   
"The size and influence of affluent African-Americans is growing faster than that of non-Hispanic Whites across all income segments, and the impact is being felt across industries," said Cheryl Pearson-McNeil, Senior Vice President, U.S. Strategic Community Alliances and Consumer Engagement, Nielsen. "These larger incomes are attributed to a number of factors including youthfulness, immigration, historic educational attainment and constant, relevant dialogue across various social media channels that have an impact on African-Americans' decisions as brand loyalists and ambassadors. Savvy marketers are taking notice."
"We believe this 'untold story' is both timely and critical to understanding African-Americans in 21st century America," said Reverend Jacques Andre DeGraff, Nielsen External Advisory Council Co-Chair. "Nielsen has been successfully providing insights and data for its clients for nearly 100 years. Now with this fifth anniversary milestone African-American report, the launching pad for the Diverse Intelligence Series, multicultural communities can be confident that Nielsen captures the importance of every demographic." (That sounded like the world's worst pitch, where they're trying to convince the reader that they've a history of being Fair and Balanced, hahahahahahha)
Highlights of Increasingly Affluent, Educated and Diverse: African-American Consumers - the Untold Story include:
Black households $70,000+ top a number of consumption categories by percentage of their annual expenditures (How the fuck is this GOOD?):
  • Personal insurance and pensions - 14.7%
  • Retirement, pensions, social security - 13.8%
  • House furnishings and equipment - 12.5%
  • Cash gifts - 7.6%
Consumption habits outpace other demographics (How the fuck is this GOOD?):
Each week, compared to all Americans, African-American adults spend 42% more time watching TV; 13% more time on a PC; and 15% more time on a smartphone than any other demographic.
Educational progression (Now this IS USEFUL, keyword; useful):
  • The rate of Black high school graduates enrolled in college increased in 2014 to 70.9%, exceeding the rate of all high-school graduates in the nation.
  • 23% of African-Americans with annual household incomes of more than $100,000 search for jobs online (compared to 14% of Whites).
  • 11% of African-Americans with annual household incomes of more than $100,000 take college courses online (compared to 5% of Whites).
Income growth rates (Numbers may be high due to lower overall # of Blacks):
  • African-American income growth rates outpaced those of non-Hispanic Whites at every annual household income level above $60,000.
  • The largest increase for African-American households occurred in the number of households earning over $200,000, with an increase of 138%, compared with a total population increase of 74%.
Media and technology use:
  • 2015 represented a tipping point as avid media consumption, powerful cultural influence and burgeoning population statistics created an unprecedented African-American impact on a broad range of industries, particularly in television, music and social media, as well as on social issues.
            
  • 'Black Twitter' is an influential cluster of users on the platform that consistently drives global trending topics and conversation. (This only matters if it produces REAL RESULTS) Popular hashtags discussed include:
#BLACKLIVESMATTER - 4,756,536
#SANDRABLAND - 3,642,898
#FERGUSON - 2,421,801 
#FREDDIEGRAY - 2,087,080
#ASKRACHEL – 994,065
Purchasing power:
The basket ring (average dollar amount spent per household annually) for African-Americans with household incomes of $100,000+ surpasses that of other groups at higher percentage rates with the following top five retail channels (So, we spend more money than other people, I see nothing on here about OWNING-N-CONTROLLING ANYTHING THOUGH):
  • Convenience stores - 123%
  • Toy stores - 40%
  • Book stores - 32%
  • Automotive stores - 15%
  • Department stores - 14%
Immigration impact:
By 2060, one of out of every six U.S. Blacks will be immigrants. Metropolitan areas that are home to some of the nation's largest Black populations are where the impact of immigration is most apparent. Black immigrants comprise the following percentages for the Black population in these metro areas:
  • Miami - 34%
  • New York - 28%
  • Washington, D.C. - 15%
For more detail and insight, download Increasingly Affluent, Educated and Diverse: African-American Consumers – the Untold Storyhere.
Notes
[1] U.S.Census, American Community Survey, 2014. Race alone or in combination.
About Nielsen's Diverse Intelligence Series
In 2011, Nielsen's first award-winning African-American report launched what is now the Diverse Intelligence Series, a robust portfolio of comprehensive reports which focus solely on multicultural consumers' (including Asian-American and Hispanic/Latino) unique consumption and purchasing habits. To learn more about Nielsen's Diverse Intelligence research series, visitwww.nielsen.com/africanamerican.
About Nielsen
Nielsen N.V. (NYSE: NLSN) is a global performance management company that provides a comprehensive understanding of what consumers Watch and Buy. Nielsen's Watch segment provides media and advertising clients with Total Audience measurement services across all devices where content --- video, audio and text --- is consumed. The Buy segment offers consumer packaged goods manufacturers and retailers the industry's only global view of retail performance measurement. By integrating information from its Watch and Buy segments and other data sources, Nielsen provides its clients with both world-class measurement as well as analytics that help improve performance.  Nielsen, an S&P 500 company, has operations in over 100 countries that cover more than 90 percent of the world's population. For more information, visit www.nielsen.com.
SOURCE Nielsen
Copyright 2015 PR Newswire