Tag Archives: jobs

African America’s March Unemployment Report – 12.4%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.7% (6.7%)

African America Unemployment: 12.4% (12.0%)

Latino America Unemployment: 7.9% (8.1%)

European America Unemployment: 5.8% (5.8%)

Asian America Unemployment: 5.4% (6.0%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall the unemployment rate went unchanged. Asian and Latino America both saw declines in their unemployment rates of 60 and 20 basis points, respectively. European America went unchanged. African America saw an increase of 40 basis points and remains the only group with double digit unemployment rate.

African American Male Unemployment: 12.1% (12.9%)

African American Female Unemployment: 11.0% (9.9%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 36.1% (32.4%)

African American Male Participation: 67.0% (66.6%)

African American Female Participation: 62.0% (61.9%)

African American Teenage Participation: 25.6% (24.9%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American male unemployment saw a decline of 80 basis points, but females and teenagers both saw significant increases of 110 and 370 basis points, respectively. Participation rates for all three groups saw increases in their participation rates.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 192 000 jobs. An increase of 17 000 over February’s numbers, but still short of the majority of economist estimates. A sluggish effect from the winter storms appears to be still dragging. African America added 21 000 jobs for March. The number of employed African Americans and participation rate is at its highest in the past five months. African America’s labor force is at its highest number in the past five months, but so is the number of unemployed. Both of these factors have a significant factor on increasing the unemployment rate. There is renewed optimism for African American job seekers, but it would take an increase of 462 000 new jobs just for African America to get its unemployment rate under 10 percent at the current labor force numbers. An amount well over 100 percent above what the entire country is currently producing. This is also the smallest number of jobs African America has added in the past five months so even though most of the marks looks good, it appears to be more like the best sweater in an ugly sweater party.

African America’s January Unemployment Report – 12.1%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.6% (6.7%)

African America Unemployment: 12.1% (11.9%)

Latino America Unemployment: 8.4% (8.3%)

European America Unemployment: 5.7% (5.9%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.8% (4.1%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall unemployment dropped 10 basis points. European America is the only group who saw their unemployment rate decline among all groups. Asian America had the largest increase among all groups. African American remains the only group with double digit unemployment rate.

African American Male Unemployment: 12.0% (11.5%)

African American Female Unemployment: 10.4% (10.4%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 38.0% (35.5%)

African American Male Participation: 66.2% (65.6%)

African American Female Participation: 61.5% (61.2%)

African American Teenage Participation: 26.4% (27.4%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: A positive gain in participation rate for both men and women groups. Unemployment rates rose for both men and teenager groups. The teenager group hit a new low in their participation rate in the rolling past five months.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 113 000 jobs. Dubbed another disappointing month by economist as it missed estimates. African America’s labor force rose to its second largest number in the past five months increasing by 157 000 showing potential optimism brewing. However, only 95 000 jobs were added keeping the overall participation rate for African America at its second lowest over the past rolling five months. The participation rate for women remains virtually unchanged over the past rolling five months. African American men are at the second lowest participation rate in the past rolling five months. The good news, men and women have the largest employed population over the past rolling five months coupled with budding optimism for the adult population. African America’s employment issues just can not seem to find stable footing for long enough to make any dent. We are not back treading at the moment, but we are certainly not making any progress.

African America’s December Unemployment Report – 11.9%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.7% (7.0%)

African America Unemployment: 11.9% (12.4%)

Latino America Unemployment: 8.3% (8.7%)

European America Unemployment: 5.9% (6.2%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.1% (5.3%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall unemployment sees another 30 basis point drop. All groups saw drops in their unemployment rates. Asian America saw the most significant decline with a 120 basis point drop. Despite a 60 basis point drop, the African American unemployment rate remains the only one in double digits.

African American Male Unemployment: 11.5% (12.1%)

African American Female Unemployment: 10.4% (11.1%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 35.5% (35.7%)

African American Male Participation: 65.6% (66.3%)

African American Female Participation: 61.2% (61.4%)

African American Teenage Participation: 27.4% (26.5%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: All three groups saw drops in their unemployment rates, but only the teenage group saw its participation rates rise.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 74 000 jobs last month. This was the lowest overall figure in the past three years raising concerns about the Federal Reserve’s continued quantitative easing policy. African America’s labor force dropped by 81 000 largely explaining the significant drop in the unemployment rate. The number of employed increased for African America by only 17 000. Despite how bad it looks, the number of employed actually is the second highest number in the past five months. This is somewhat unsettling given the amount of season hires potentially baked into the statistics. As employers start to unwind these temporary hires over the next few months a clearer picture of African America’s employment situation should come to bear.

African America’s November Unemployment Report – 12.5%

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Overall Unemployment: 7.0% (7.3%)

African America Unemployment: 12.5% (13.1%)

Latino America Unemployment: 8.7% (9.1%)

European America Unemployment: 6.2% (6.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 5.3% (5.2%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall unemployment dropped by 30 basis points. African and Latino American unemployment rates saw significant declines, while European America saw a negligible decline. Asian America’s unemployment rate saw a rise by 10 basis points, but remains the group with the lowest unemployment rate. African American despite its drop remains the only group with a double digit unemployment rate.

African American Male Unemployment: 12.3% (13.0%)

African American Female Unemployment: 11.1% (11.5%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 35.8% (36.0%)

African American Male Participation: 66.6% (66.8%)

African American Female Participation: 61.4% (61.3%)

African American Teenage Participation: 26.5% (27.3%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American male unemployment rate drops, but their participation also continues to drop. The AAM participation rate is at a five month low. African American female unemployment rate saw a 40 basis point decline, while the second month in a row saw their participation rate tick up 10 basis points. The African American teenage group saw its unemployment rate decline by 20 points, and like the male group saw a second straight month of declines in their participation rate. Participation rate for teenagers has dropped 290 basis points off its five month high.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 203 000 jobs. African America saw its employed ranks rise by 101 000. Unfortunately, the participation rate dropped again dropping to its lowest over the past five months negating any euphoria of the job additions. Last month was a brutal month with five month lows in almost every statistical category for employment for African Americans making November a month more focused on recouping the losses. Just how much of the employment additions are seasonal hires for the holidays will not be known until February when companies will start to shed seasonal hires. The labor force also continues to shrink and is at its lowest number over the past five months as African Americans continue to feel job prospects are simply not there and are simply giving up on looking. Those not in the labor force cracked 12 million for the first time. Times are tough for the African America labor situation with no signs of improvement as 2013 crawls to a close.

African America’s October Unemployment Report – 13.1%

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Overall Unemployment: 7.3% (7.2%)

African America Unemployment: 13.1% (12.9%)

Latino America Unemployment: 9.1% (9.0%)

European America Unemployment: 6.3% (6.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 5.2% (5.3%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall unemployment ticked up by 10 basis points. African and Latino American unemployment rate ticked upward by 20 and 10 basis points, respectively. European American unemployment rate remained unchanged. Asian Americans were the only group to see a decline in their unemployment rate. African America remains the only group with double digit unemployment.

African American Male Unemployment: 13.0% (14.0%)

African American Female Unemployment: 11.5% (10.0%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 36.0% (35.1%)

African American Male Participation: 66.8% (67.9%)

African American Female Participation: 61.3% (61.2%)

African American Teenage Participation: 27.3% (29.4%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American male unemployment drops, but male participation rate also declines by 110 basis points. African American female unemployment see the inverse of males with unemployment rising, while female participation rate bumps up 10 basis points. African American teenagers suffered a double blow of of a rising unemployment rate, while their participation rate dropped by 210 basis points.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 204 000 jobs in October. However, African America saw a decline of 184 000 jobs. The uncertain pattern going into last month has cleared up, but unfortunately the certainty that has come is grimace. Four key employment metrics: labor force, number of employed, employment-population ratio, and participation rate are all at five month lows. The number of unemployed is at its second highest in five months. There is no lipstick to put on this current pig. The best hope there is right now is temporary hiring due to the holidays the next few months, but there is very little in the way for optimism based on current employment patters in African America.