Since the first bin contains $k$ balls with probability
$$\frac{{e\choose k}{me-e\choose b-k}}{{me\choose b}},$$
we get the recursion relation
$$p_e(m,b)=\sum_{k=0}^{\lfloor e/2\rfloor}\frac{{e\choose k}{me-e\choose b-k}}{{me\choose b}}p_e(m-1,b-k)$$
with $p_e(m,b)$ denoting the probability that each of the $m$ bins filled with $e$ balls contain at least as many
white than black balls where the total number of black balls is $b$ and with the bins 
filled uniformly. (If we want strict inequality,
we have to replace the upper summation-bound $\lfloor e/2\rfloor$ by
$\lfloor (e-1)/2\rfloor$.

Using the obvious initial condition $p_e(1,b)=1$ if $b\leq e/2$ (respectively 
$b$ strictly smaller than $e/2$ if we wish strict inequality) and $p_e(1,b)=0$ otherwise,
we can compute $p_e(m,b)$ by an algorithm needing roughly the computation of $2mb+m$
binomial coefficients
and having a memory requirement $b$ (by computing $p_e(a+1,0),\dots,p_e(a+1,b)$
using the values $p_e(a,0),\dots,p_e(a,b)$.