Reducing the disparity in will-writing between Black and white households would shrink the racial wealth gap in America, according to a new study.

Eliminating the so-called will gap would cut the stubbornly wide difference in wealth among the two races by “a modest but meaningful” 10% over three generations, according to a working academic paper and research brief released earlier this month by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. The paper hasn’t received peer review or approval for publication in an academic journal. The key findings of the research, which was financially supported by Wells Fargo, show the importance of financial advisors’ will and estate-planning services.

“It’s a pretty easy thing to do to write a will — relative to, say, saving a lot more money,” said Gal Wettstein, a senior research economist with the center and one of four co-authors of the report, alongside Jean-Pierre Aubry, Alicia Munnell and Oliver Shih. “We think that it’s a pretty low-hanging fruit in terms of making progress.”

Their conclusions followed another report by the center last year concluding Black and Hispanic Americans “are less likely to get an inheritance, have a will, and plan to leave a bequest” and other research at the intersection of race and wealth. For example, racial differences in retirement savings, homeownership subsidies and tax advantages remain persistent factors.

READ MORE: Starting estate planning conversations — even without tax expertise

Despite a significant narrowing of the ratio of wealth between white and Black households between 1880 and 1950, it has stayed around 6-to-1 in recent decades amid “evidence that it has been growing wider since the 1980s,” according to the study. Wiping out the wealth gap would take more than three centuries at the current pace, the McKinsey Institute for Black Economic Mobility found in another study earlier this year.

The center’s number-crunching, using data from the University of Michigan Health and Retirement Study, offers another lens of examining that gap. “Even after adjusting for characteristics such as wealth, education, presence of living children, and having received an inheritance in the past,” Black households are 20 percentage points less likely than whites to have a valid will, the study said.

That reflects a juxtaposition in which “many African American households are gaining in income and are very quickly moving into the middle class, upper middle class” yet feel a sense of “intimidation to step into an office, an investment firm’s office, and engage in a conversation of, ‘Hey, I’d like to start investing,'” Association of African American Financial Advisors Chair Alex David, who’s also the division director of the northeast for Raymond James Financial Services, said in an interview last week. The lack of wills stems from “a culmination of a number of socioeconomic factors that go into starting a conversation,” he said.



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