The #BuyBlack movement had a moment in 2020. Was that all it was?

Supporting Black creators has consumed Aurora James for her entire working life. The Toronto-born fashion designer started her sustainable line Brother Vellies in 2013 as a means to employ artisans across Africa and preserve traditional shoe-making techniques. Founded with a mere $3,500, her company grew into a high-fashion favorite, with fans in Beyoncé, Meghan Markle and Serena Williams. But that was never the point.

The mission of representation hit closer to home in the summer of 2020, when a wave of unrest swept the US and masses took to the streets to protest racial inequality in the wake of the unjust killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and others. Banks, media conglomerates and big box retailers scrambled to signal their support, but James still believed they could all do more. So she took to Instagram and challenged retailers to make a commitment to devote 15% of their spending to Black-owned businesses. After all, Black people represent 15% of the American population, “and we need to represent 15% of your shelf space”, she explained on social media.

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With that, the Fifteen Percent Pledge was born. Sephora, Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s were the first juggernauts to come onboard. With 29 retailers across three countries currently participating, the pledge claims to have directed more than $10bn into some 625 businesses that are at least 51% Black-owned. The organization started to advise small Black-owned companies on business development, as a means to circumvent the structural racism that necessitated groups like the Fifteen Percent Pledge in the first place. “We understand the history and the infrastructure and how Black people have been historically and intentionally excluded from building wealth,” says LaToya Williams-Belfort, executive director of the nonprofit. “What we need from corporations is for them to reverse that.”

According to research from the consulting firm McKinsey, about 15% of white Americans hold some form of business equity, compared with only 5% of Black Americans. The pledge has set a goal for retailers to pour $1.4tn into Black-owned businesses while upping their overall representation in the US marketplace to 14.6% by 2030. Closing the wealth gap redounds to everyone’s benefit since an equitable economy is a healthy economy.

But the journey is far from over. Williams-Belfort reckons that most pledge-takers are currently indexing at about 3% representation on their shelves, and commends them for starting the process. After all, fixing a broken system doesn’t happen overnight. Sephora says it’s reached 15% in the haircare category, while Nordstrom says it added 145 new “Black and Latinx-owned brands” in 2021. Lackadaisical consumer attitudes haven’t exactly helped influence retailers to sprint to the finish line. The urgency to #BuyBlack reached fever pitch during the early days of the lockdown but once that fervor cooled, so did the spending spree.