Are Black Men Saving Luxury Retail During the Pandemic?

Black purchasing power is growing far faster than its White counterpart — and now we need to figure out how to leverage it

Mike Muse
LEVEL

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Photo: Jeff Greenberg/Getty Images

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Since March, when New York City first shuttered its offices, restaurants, and most retail, I’ve done virtually all my shopping online. I was never an online shopper, but now I don’t know how I existed this long. This has been a vast shift in my spending patterns. Before, I traveled often, and ate out on a daily basis even when I was home in New York. Now, I cook — which is only possible because I ordered my first set pots and pans online. (Don’t judge me.) I even watch cooking competition shows on Netflix.

Just recently, though, I returned to a brick-and-mortar location for the first time in months — a luxury department store on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue. I was anxious before I walked in. Questions circled in my head. Would it be crowded? Would adequate safety measures be in place? Would shoppers adhere to the mask policy?

The one question I didn’t foresee myself asking, though, was where are the White people?

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