Tag Archives: unemployment

African America’s October Unemployment Report – 14.3%

Overall Unemployment: 7.9% (7.8%)

African America Unemployment: 14.3% (13.4%)

Latino America Unemployment: 10.0% (9.9%)

European America Unemployment: 7.0% (7.0%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.9% (4.8%)

Analysis: African America saw a significant uptick in the unemployment rate from 13.4% in the previous month. European America’s unemployment rate was unchanged and Asian and Latino America sees negligible uptick.

African American Male Unemployment: 14.1% (14.2%)

African American Female Unemployment: 12.4% (10.9%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 40.5% (36.7%)

African American Male Participation: 67.7% (67.0%)

African American Female Participation: 63.9% (62.0%)

African American Teenage Participation: 29.0% (28.9%)

*Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American men see a negligible drop in their unemployment while the women and teenager group see significant upticks in their unemployment rate from the previous month. Men and women subgroups both see an increase in their respective participation groups which is a sign that more African Americans are seeking work. African American men added approximately 100,000 to their labor force and also picked up approximately 100,000 employed which largely explains why the participation rate went up and unemployment rate went down. A rare occurrence. African American women added approximately 300,000 to their labor force but only employed 100,000 which explains both significant increases in both participation and unemployment rate. More women are coming back into the job search but the pace at which they are coming is not being matched by employment. African American teenagers labor force shrank as well as number of employed shrank and their unemployment rate is the third highest in the developed world for youth trailing only Spain and Greece.

Conclusion: African American employment is seeing its highest participation rate of the past 5 months but appears to be stuck in a band and really unable to make any significant traction. We could say the glass is half full and that sideways employment is better than declining employment.  Year over year participation is up for the women but men have seen a significant decrease in their participation rate over that same period. Surprisingly, it is the teenage subgroup participation rate that is carrying African America’s overall participation rate year over year from last October as the teenage subgroup has risen from 24.3% in 2011 to its current 28.9% in 2012. Sentiment is up among African America as the number in the labor force is also at its highest in 5 months but caution should prevail as this is the time of year for seasonal hires as the holiday shopping season kicks off which provide for only temporary economic engagement.

Source: Department of Labor

African America’s September Unemployment Report – 13.4%

Overall Unemployment: 7.8%

African America Unemployment: 13.4%

European America Unemployment: 7.0%

Asian America Unemployment: 4.8%

Analysis: Asian America had the largest decline in its unemployment rate dropping from 5.9% to 4.8% overall. African America had the next largest decline from 14.1% to 13.4% overall.

African American Male Unemployment: 14.2%

African American Female Unemployment: 10.9%

African American Teenage Unemployment: 36.7%

African American Male Participation: 67.0%

African American Female Participation: 62.0%

African American Teenage Participation: 29.0%

Analysis: All three subgroups saw declines in their unemployment rates in September. The men and women saw negligible declines as the teenage subgroup was the driving force behind the big decline in African America’s unemployment rate. As with the country as a whole part-time jobs make up the bulk of the reason for the decline in the unemployment rate carried primarily by the teenage subgroup. Participation rates for men and women both declined while the teenage subgroup saw a bounce back in participation to its July levels after a significant decline in August.

Conclusion: There is very little to get excited about looking at the numbers for African America. The unemployment rate is down but so is the participation rate for the men and women’s groups. The rebound of teenage participation, which is in constant crisis itself, for African America masked the participation drop of the adult declines. An unsettling thought when you realize they are also the lowest wage earners in an already vastly under earning African America.

Source: Department of Labor

Public Sector Dependency: African America’s Employment Problem

There can be no freedom of the individual, no democracy, without the capital system, the profit system, the private enterprise system. These are, in the end, inseparable. Those who would destroy freedom have only first to destroy the hope of gain, the profit of enterprise and risk-taking, the hope of accumulating capital, the hope to save something for one’s old age and for one’s children. For a community of men without property, and without the hope of getting it by honest effort, is a community of slaves of a despotic State.  — Russell Leffingwell

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It is no secret that the African American middle class (net worth between $50,000 and $499,000) was built primarily by the public sector after events like desegregation and Black Wall Street massacre virtually wiped out the African American private sector ownership and wealth. The apex of African American wealth still arguably coming in the 1920s and having been on a precipitous decline since the 1950s as the Civil Rights Movement gained traction. In the last recession African America lost 83 percent of its median net worth.

The public sector now accounts for more than 1 in 5 African American jobs which is 30 percent higher than any other ancestral group in the US. That 30 percent premium also is telling as to why the income gap is so pronounced between African Americans ($34,218), European Americans ($55,530), and Asian Americans ($65,637) given public sector jobs have always and will always be lower than those in the private sector. Couple that with public sector slashing jobs, benefits, and pay to deal with growing deficits and the income gap will only expand. It should say something that even with this dependency on the public sector our unemployment rate is 14.1 percent while the overall unemployment rate is 8.1 percent, European American unemployment rate is 7.2 percent, and Asian American unemployment is 5.9 percent. It should also be a warning to us that a country with $16 trillion in debt will be forced to eventually dramatically reduce the size of government. This will obviously disproportionately impact African America.

Here is a statistic one might need to consider. Of the 400 richest Americans 0 percent made their wealth via the public sector. Let me say again 0 percent of the richest Americans made their wealth via the public sector. In fact the only place in the known world where public sector employees make great sums of wealth are dictatorships where the country’s wealth and dictator’s wealth is intertwined. The pursuit of wealth is oft perceived as something “evil” in our community instead of a necessary tool to protect and develop our social, economic, and political interest.

There are 1.9 million registered African American owned businesses according to latest census numbers. Unfortunately, 1.8 million (95 percent) of those businesses have no paid employees and are considered nonemployer firms. The current employable labor force for African America is at approximately 30 million with only 18.3 million (61.3 percent) of it employed and participating in the labor force which is the lowest percentage among all groups. If each of those 1.8 million businesses hired just one person our participation rate would jump from 61.3 to 67 percent and give us far and away the highest participation rate as well drop our unemployment rate from 14.1 to 4.3 percent. Yes, just by them each hiring one person. It would be an understatement to again stress that as America’s economy overall adjust itself to emerging economic powerhouses around the world competing for the resources of the world both natural and capital that the public sector here will have no choice but to shrink to compensate. The strategy of public sector dependency has not served us well in any economic aspect. Maybe it is time we revisit the private sector independence strategy that our forebears used coming out of slavery that saw us at our most economically prosperous. I often wonder sometimes if it was not broke why did we break it.