Did you ever play Monopoly as a child?
Imagine if your family started playing together on a rainy day but said
you couldn’t play.
They open the board, roll the dice… start buying those flashy dark blue streets (hello Boardwalk), and take over the railroads…
Then they tell you that you can join in.
Finally! You leap up, ignoring the anger you feel at being left out for so long, and eagerly grab your place around the board.
Everyone else has tripled the cash you have, as they’ve been in the game for so long…
And you’re immediately charged eye-watering rent for landing at Park Place before being thrown in jail, where you haven’t got enough cash for bail. (Yep, you lose even more time while your opponents buy up the rest of the board!)
Does this sound fair? Would you have accepted this?
I think not.
But this is the reality for many African Americans — it’s why they are overrepresented in prisons, underrepresented in college, and make less money, on average, than their white counterparts in similar positions.
Because just like this Monopoly story, they have historically shut out of many paths to wealth, including membership in labor unions, access to FHA mortgages, jobs in the civil service, and education in well-equipped schools.
Other communities of color have faced similar obstacles – leading to a racial wealth gap that has made white people, on average, wealthier than people of color.
Here’s the truth, we are not all on a level playing field.
And this is why we need equity, not equality.
Equality is saying, “okay you can start playing Monopoly with the same money we started with half an hour ago…”
Equity is acknowledging that you will need to start with a disproportionately higher amount of money (and share of the properties) than the others started with to be able to have a fair chance of surviving so late into the game.
As a diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioner I spend a fair bit of time in my workshops helping people understand this difference so they can better support equity in the workplace.
Because if people feel like they can survive, thrive, and even win at work then you will have a much happier workplace environment — the kind of place where staff want to stick around.
Because nobody wants to see the workplace equivalent of someone throwing the Monopoly board up in the air, which only leaves everyone feeling frustrated as they pick up the pieces around them and start again. And again.
Want help with introducing fair, equitable practices into your workplace? Drop me a reply now and let’s chat!
Melissa
PS Did you see the video that went viral with
this Monopoly story during the George Floyd protests?
PPS If you’re a teacher you can actually teach about equity using a game of Monopoly in the classroom —
read more here.
PPPS
Contact me if you want to find out how I can help your workplace improve equity so staff don’t just survive, but thrive!
Quote of the day
“I’ve come upon something that disturbs me deeply... We have fought hard and long for integration, as I believe we should have, and I know that we will win. But I’ve come to believe we’re integrating into a burning house.” - Martin Luther King, Jr.
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