\ TIDRTY P C of th new workforce will be provided by minority mal and immigran . Fifty-five percent will be provo by native-born women. Corporatio which re expanding either will have to ccept more omen and minori' inlO upper levels of man gement, or ey will be forced 10 recruit even deeper inID the pool of I qualified white males. Second, a multicultural perspective will be necessary because of the changing racial composition of the United States. By 1997, e majority of the population of California, the larg t Ie, win co . t of Mexican-America ,American Indians, African-Americans lid Asians. By 2020, the majority of the American labor force between the g of 21 and 40 will be nonwhite. In the next thiny years, the hite population wiD have little growth; the nonwhite population will almost double. Third, in mational factors will force corporations to gain a b er, multicultural perspective. The growth of Japan as w rid economic power, dominating the entire P cific rim '5 economy, means th t thousands of white American managers, engineers and accountan will be forced to wor in Japan, South Korea, or 0 er Asian nations. The Japanese 1 nguage and an appreciation of Asian cultures and societies will be important . too for dialogue and exchange. The increased importance of mic mar in Latin America, IQU '. , tbe I nd Afiica will mean t corpQrations will r . uire man gers who possess a solid background in the cultures, eth- nicities, 'languag and politics of these regions. . .FlNALLY, SOME corporations are beginning to realize that African-Americans and other people of color. do not buy the same things that wbi buy. This bouldn't be surprising. People with different cultures have distinct social habits, tastes, and aeathetics. African-Americans represent less than 13 per­ cent of the total population, yet they purchase more than 2() percent of many different types of food, clothing, certain automobiles, pd so forth. Marketing tudies show that nonwhites are more product or brand loyal than most whites. They purchase more cosmetics and haircare produc than whi . Blacks buy more than one quarter of many pork products, and one fourth of the rice con­ sumed. They buy about one third of all fruit flavored soft drinks . and Kools cigan:ttes. Any corporation which ignores the racial upects of the co umer market, domestically or internationally, will erode its martet sbare and reduce its own profits. For African-Americans and other people of color, "racial economics", also means new leverage for corporate concessions. Selective buying campaigns can be an increasingly effective weapon 10 force corporations to reinvest part of their profits back into our communities. Dr. Manning Marable is Professor of Political Science, University 0/ Colorado, Boult!er. "Along the Color Line" ap­ pears in over 200 publications internationally. / THE MICHIGAN' CITIZEN Publ18hed .aoh Sunday by NEW DAY PUBUSI1I Q ENTERPRISE 12141 econd t P.O. Box 035e0 HI land P rk, 148203 Phone: (313) I FIX': (313) eet-043O w.tem Michigan Bureau: 175 W. a n St P.O. Box 211, n H rbor, I 41022 (111) 127-1527 PutJ/j • Ch D. Kelly Editor. � Kelly � MIch/(Jlln Editor: Bernice Brown CIty Editor: DerrI C. L Copy Editor. L EnIfH1aInment Editor: KM�" VIElVS bo phere ill the fo te Africu AmeIk:aDt t ome very diftlcult times abe� . With hi .good will- evaporati in the � 0 ecoDOmiC bird . and political dema oguery, Afri Americans m t be prepmd to Diu­ imize BI political and ccono lc resources 10 etfectively pmmo pro�Bl ctin tsamdap Ive BI agenda DeYerbe ROil Dt:utiels .sG"W$ tIS PraUIteIu 0/ the 11Uti.tule /01' � 01-­ gallizatioll and Developlflellt III YOfUIgstown, Ohio. HeJIUIY be eeM- tQCted at (216) 746-5741. ,� , 'i , r • � , 10 cape for ... ec:oDOlDic h taultecl in prosperity fo a few and misery for milli . The Republicans can be expected to continue to fan the flame of fear and re ction mean of retaining po er and privile.· .. Meanwhile the Democratic Party seems impotent to cope with the . play Republicanadvamagein termsoftbe politics -of The Democra ha failed to use their upport for PO MO THAN decade civil rigbts to education the tbc U.s. economy been in a tate American public on the adverse im- ofpelpdUll crisis. 'lbe troubled U.S. pact of pe . tentaclsm on B c MANYWIP I I!S NOW feel that ec:ooamy proclucccl a fertile eo- IDd minorities aDd the entire nation. '. 'J .'J .,, 'f 'I'" :0 f'\:_ · 8 t , ;, ,� . OJ . .. I: .. '� ���t '0,#'" .. "'. · � .t., " .' .- '1 .··.l ... I ), , .:,-, ...... , '1 ... !.' .�'l: I t'-l .. .1.0� t ..... \', . " ,. ,"'1 I ... � I . .... '. J. , . .., aenJamln P:' � Chavl. Jr. '..1'. · " findings of the Comml.iloJl. Thi. group bu prOfited from raci.m of the court .y.tem. It h been another· old old bOJ'! ne t ork hich enaenden • maintain hite supremac'4t value and views. But now the "sheets have been pulled orr of the court sy.tem. There i. DO . , an opportun! ty to redre •• grievous situation. • The cour , like this .ociet" are not color blind. But 0 demands for equal j tice m peniat. "l"'l No Justicel 0 P ' .. , • ProductIon M.".aer: ProductIon Staff: Mltcet,. . AIIvfIrI 'ng RIIp(i ... 1tdve: Terry Aww"'-- By Be ami a F. Cb .. ll, Jr. the other 'tate need to be just A million -dollar .tudy has candid and forthrigbt a. the New no been eleased tbat docu- York Judicial Commi ion. The ments the existence of racial in- report declared, "there are' two justice in the judicial sy tem of justice sy tems t ork in the the state of New York. It took courts of New York State, one for three years to complete the re- wbite. and a very different one search. This i. another example for minorities and tbe poor," of how pervuive the problem of Former u.s. Secretary of "institutionalized raclsm" bas State, Cyrus R. Vance, wbo become in AlVerica. served as a member of the N.Y. The Ne York only exposes Judicial Commi ion lamented, greater lipt on a problem that is "That's a terrible condemnation . real in every state. There is a of our society. " double standard of justice, one . bued on race and the otherba ed - SOME 0 the findings of the on income. report on the New York judiciary Seventeen prominent leaal are the followin : authoritie comprised the Ne (1) "Court officen are likelier York State Judicial Commission to be openly bo tile and socially on Minoritie . The Commission biased then the court concluded tbat the New York employee." . judicial system i. ain � ted ith (2) ·Minority la yen en­ racl m.· We take not of this COD- counter racial bia., Includina . f1 Ion aDd e Do that all of Jo e. aDd racial .tereotypln by opposing counsel." (3) "Members of minority group are less likely than whites to serve on juries and to receive favorable action from the courts and arc Ie often represented by la yers in housing and family courts. " Barlier thi year the Wasbington, D.C. based Sen­ tencing Project substantiated tba t the incarcer tion rate for African American makea in the United States is higher than the Incarcer lion rate of African males in raci t South Africa. The findin of ·the New York study help to provide clues a. to hy nearly a If million African �ericans a behind bars tOday in the United State. o COU E, New York Court Otficea M oelation w the Drat aro to denounce the