# “To Be Twice as Good to Get Half”: Minorities’ Diminished Returns

**Authors:** Shervin Assari, John Ashley Pallera, Hossein Zare

PMC · DOI: 10.31586/jbls.2025.1158 · 2025-10-16

## TL;DR

Black individuals in the U.S. must work much harder to achieve the same outcomes as White individuals due to systemic racism and inequality.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the concept of Minorities’ Diminished Returns (MDRs) to explain how systemic barriers reduce the benefits of socioeconomic success for marginalized groups.

## Key findings

- High-SES Black individuals still face higher risks of depression and chronic disease due to structural inequities.
- Structural racism in sectors like banking and policing erodes the protective effects of socioeconomic status.
- Policies must address systemic barriers, not just individual success, to achieve health and economic equity.

## Abstract

“To Be Twice as Good to Get Half” is a common mindset among high aspiration and ambition Black individuals in the U.S., capturing the lived reality of Minorities’ Diminished Returns (MDRs). This paper explains that MDRs reflect how, even with high levels of ambition, self-efficacy, education, and income, Black individuals and other marginalized groups do not experience the same protective benefits for health and well-being as White populations. Systemic obstacles embedded within U.S. society weaken the expected returns on socioeconomic achievements for racialized individuals, creating a reality where “being twice as good” still results in lesser outcomes. High-SES Black individuals, for instance, continue to face significant risks for adverse outcomes, such as depression and chronic disease, due to structural inequities across domains like labor market discrimination, segregation, and accumulated disadvantage from childhood. Our analysis identifies key mechanisms—including interpersonal discrimination, lower-quality education, and structural racism in sectors like banking, policing, and real estate—that erode the protective effects of SES across racial lines. Mediating factors, such as chronic stress, allostatic load, and epigenetic changes over the life course, further compound these diminished returns, weakening the expected physical and mental health benefits. Drawing on extensive evidence from U.S. national and local datasets and corroborated by international studies, this paper underscores the necessity of policies that dismantle structural barriers rather than relying solely on SES improvements. Recommendations include implementing multi-sectoral policies, recognizing the unique challenges of middle-class non-White populations, and approaching policy with humility, acknowledging that achieving equity is a long-term endeavor. By challenging the “bootstraps” narrative, this paper advocates for structural interventions aimed at genuine health and economic equity for all racial and socioeconomic groups. While we provide an in-depth analysis of MDRs’ phenomena, mechanisms, mediators, and policy implications, the experience is often distilled as, “I have to be twice as good to get half.”

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MONDO:0002050)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MESH:D003866), chronic disease (MESH:D002908)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12526249