Tag Archives: unemployment rate

African America’s September Jobs Report – 11.0%

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Overall Unemployment: 5.9% (6.1%)

African America Unemployment: 11.0% (11.4%)

Latino America Unemployment: 6.9% (7.5%)

European America Unemployment: 5.1% (5.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.3% (4.5%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: The overall unemployment rate dropped 20 basis points. All four groups saw declines in their unemployment rates. Latino America led the way with the largest decline of 60 basis points. African America continues to be the only group that remains with a double digit unemployment rate.

African American Male Unemployment: 11.0% (10.8%)

African American Female Unemployment: 9.6% (10.6%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 30.5% (32.8%)

African American Male Participation: 68.5% (67.3%)

African American Female Participation: 61.4% (61.5%)

African American Teenage Participation: 28.6% (25.9%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American males saw their unemployment rate raise 20 basis points and their participation rate climb 120 basis points. African American females saw their unemployment rate drop 100 basis points and their participation rate drop 10 basis points. African American teenagers unemployment rate dropped 230 basis points and their participation rates climbed 270 basis points.

CONCLUSION: The overall economy added 248 000 jobs in September. Considered a healthy bounce back after a disappointing August. For the first time in a significant period, African America’s job growth actually outpaced the country adding 288 000 jobs in September. Over the past five months job growth for African America has grown 2.5 percent which outpaces both Latino and European America. The African American teenagers were the run away winners of the September boom with a significant increase  and decrease in participation and unemployment rate, respectively. A group that remains in an employment crisis, but has its largest number of employed in the past five months. A significant impact for African American families who are often dependent on teenager wages. If African America can hold its current labor force and add 210 000 jobs in the month of October, then it will actually break the elusive almost unicorn-like single digit unemployment rate that continues to elude African America.

African America’s August Jobs Report – 11.4%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.1% (6.2%)

African America Unemployment: 11.4% (11.4%)

Latino America Unemployment: 7.5% (7.8%)

European America Unemployment: 5.3% (5.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.5% (4.5%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: The overall unemployment rate dropped 10 basis points. Unemployment rates for African, Asian, and European America went unchanged. Latino America saw its unemployment rate drop 30 basis points. African America remains the only group with double digit unemployment.

African American Male Unemployment: 10.8% (11.1%)

African American Female Unemployment: 10.6% (10.1%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 32.8% (34.9%)

African American Male Participation: 67.3% (68.0%)

African American Female Participation: 61.5% (62.3%)

African American Teenage Participation: 25.9% (25.3%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American males saw their unemployment rate drop 30 basis points and participation rate drop 70 basis points. African American females unemployment rate rose 50 basis points and participation rate drop 80 basis points. African American teenagers unemployment rate dropped 210 basis points and participation rate rose by 60 basis points.

CONCLUSION: The overall economy added 142 000 jobs in August. A significant disappointment from most economist estimates. After 3 straight months of job growth for African America, the growth came to a bruising halt in August with a loss of 76 000 jobs. No group suffered more than African American women who loss 155 000 jobs dropping to their second lowest number of employed over the past 5 months. A disturbing notion since African American women continue to be the cornerstone of the economic health for African American families. Despite the losses, the number of African Americans employed and participation rate are both still the second highest they have been in the past 5 months. The real question is whether this is the start of a trend downward for African America or just a temporary blip. It would take 291 000 jobs to get the African American unemployment rate to 9.9 percent.

African America’s July Jobs Report – 11.4%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.2% (6.1%)

African America Unemployment: 11.4% (10.7%)

Latino America Unemployment: 7.8% (7.8%)

European America Unemployment: 5.3% (5.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.5% (5.1%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: The overall unemployment rate rose 10 basis points. European and Latino Americans saw their unemployment rates go unchanged. Asian America saw a 60 basis point decline in their unemployment rate. African America was the only group to see an increase rising 70 basis points and remaining the only group with double digit unemployment.

African American Male Unemployment: 11.1% (10.9%)

African American Female Unemployment: 10.1% (9.0%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 34.9% (33.4%)

African American Male Participation: 68.0% (67.5%)

African American Female Participation: 62.3% (61.4%)

African American Teenage Participation: 27.3% (25.2%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American males saw their unemployment rate rise 20 basis points, but also experienced a healthy increase in their participation rate of 50 basis points. African American females short lived single digit unemployment rose 110 basis points, but they also experienced a rise in their participation rate of 90 basis points. African American teenagers continue to struggle with a rise of 150 basis points in their unemployment rate and only a negligible rise in their participation rate.

CONCLUSION: The overall economy added 209 000 jobs in July. Economist overall believe the economy is finally showing signs of healthy and stable recovery as job increases continue over 200 000 per month. African America picked up 69 000 new jobs and set another five month high of employed at almost 16.9 million. The momentum for hiring has definitely picked up African American optimism as the labor force increased by over 200 000, which is the reason the unemployment rate had such a spike. It also speaks to the fact that hiring can not keep pace with the number of African Americans seeking jobs. African American men and women are experiencing five month highs in labor force, employed, and participation rate. Unfortunately, teenagers continue their crisis with a five month low in employed population. The question is can this economy continue its recovery or as the Federal Reserve inches closer to raising interest rates will the usual adage of last hire and first fired come true once again.

African America’s June Jobs Report – 10.7%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.1% (6.3%)

African America Unemployment: 10.7% (11.5%)

Latino America Unemployment: 7.8% (7.7%)

European America Unemployment: 5.3% (5.4%)

Asian America Unemployment: 5.1% (5.3%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: The overall unemployment rate dropped 20 basis points. Latino America was the only group to see a rise in their unemployment rate ticking up 10 basis points. African America saw the largest decline with an 80 basis point drop. Asian and European Americans saw drops of 20 and 10 basis points, respectively. African America continues to be the only group with double digit unemployment.

African American Male Unemployment: 10.9% (11.5%)

African American Female Unemployment: 9.0% (10.0%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 33.4% (31.1%)

African American Male Participation: 67.5% (66.8%)

African American Female Participation: 61.4% (61.2%)

African American Teenage Participation: 27.8% (27.9%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American males see a drop of 60 basis points in their unemployment rate and an increase in 70 basis points in their participation rate. African American females saw a drop of 100 basis points in their unemployment rate, but a tempered increase of only 20 basis points in their participation rate. African American teenagers suffer a number of setbacks with increases in their unemployment rate by 230 basis points and decrease in participation rate by 10 basis points.

CONCLUSION: The overall economy added 288 000 jobs in June. Significantly more than economist expected after previous months failed to live up to expectations. African America picked up 220 000 jobs in June, completely shattering the abysmal previous months job growth. However, despite this record breaking month of jobs the participation rate is virtually unmoved. An increase of 20 basis points to 61.0 percent, which is not even the high among the previous five months. African America’s participation rate continues to be stuck in a tight band between 60.5 to 61.5 percent. Both men and women were net gainers of jobs for African America, but women who picked up the most jobs have a participation rate that is still the second lowest it has been over the past five months. The teenage group which is highly vulnerable is backsliding at a time of year when teenage unemployment should be picking up. The economy for all intentions “feels” better, but African America could be in for a rude awakening after the midterm elections if the Federal Reserve starts to hint at a rate hike, which might cause companies to lay workers off to keep their equity prices at their current levels. Currently, African American needs approximately 150 000 jobs to get its unemployment rate to 9.9 percent.

 

African America’s May Unemployment Report – 11.6%

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Overall Unemployment: 6.3% (6.3%)

African America Unemployment: 11.5% (11.6%)

Latino America Unemployment: 7.7% (7.3%)

European America Unemployment: 5.4% (5.3%)

Asian America Unemployment: 5.3% (5.7%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: The overall unemployment rate remained unchanged. Group increases and decreases were evenly split. African and Asian America saw drops of 10 and 40 basis points, respectively. European and Latino America saw increases of 10 and 40 basis points, respectively. African America remains the only group with a double digit unemployment rate.

African American Male Unemployment: 11.5% (10.8%)

African American Female Unemployment: 10.0% (10.4%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 31.1% (36.8%)

African American Male Participation: 66.8% (66.4%)

African American Female Participation: 61.2% (61.7%)

African American Teenage Participation: 27.8% (27.9%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American males saw an increase of 70 basis points in their unemployment rate, but also saw an increase in their participation rate of 40 basis points. African American females saw a decline of 40 basis points in their unemployment rate, but also saw a decline of 50 basis points in their participation rate. African American teenagers saw an unprecedented drop of 570 basis points in their unemployment rate and essentially held steady their participation rate.

Conclusion: The overall economy added 217 000 jobs in the month of May. After a stellar past few months of job growth in African America, momentum slowed to a halt in May with only 8 000 jobs added in the month of May. The participation rate dropped 10 basis points, but essentially has not moved out of its 5 month band meaning actual employment numbers even with the appearance of jobs being added are dead in the water. African American women’s sudden drop in participation rate is alarming and unexpected. The backbone of African America’s fragile economy given their propensity to be head of household and/or breadwinner means sudden shifts in their employment state has immediate impacts on families and communities. African American teenagers actually showed real inroads to their employment crisis picking up 38 000 jobs and holding their labor force numbers steady which prompted an acute drop in their unemployment rate and substantive increase in their participation rate. Despite this shining beacon of success the overall African American employment situation is stagnant. African America’s current labor force would need to add 300 000 jobs in one month to get the unemployment rate to 9.9 percent.