Houston Chronicle Sunday

Unemployme­nt rates for Black Americans higher

- By Julia Fanzeres

The labor market is recovering, but not as strongly for Black workers.

The unemployme­nt rate for Black Americans improved slightly last month, but at 9.6 percent is still higher than all other race groups tracked and the national average of 6 percent, recent data from the Labor Department shows. Gaps persist between Black and white workers, including among those who are highly educated, the data shows.

Pandemic job cuts have disproport­ionately affect- ed minority communitie­s. Now, as the economy reopens, policymake­rs including Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell are watching closely to see whether employment gains are benefiting all workers.

“It’s slack in the labor market,” Powell said in response to a question about high rates of Black unemployme­nt during a March 17 news conference. “It’s sad to see, because those disparitie­s had really come down to record lows” before the pandemic.

The disparate impact on Black Americans reflects systemic discrimina­tion,

according to some economists. Case in point: Even Black workers with more education are faring worse than their white peers.

In March, the unemployme­nt rate for Black workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher was 4.7 percent, compared with 3.6 percent for white Americans, according to Labor Department data that’s not seasonally adjusted. But that gap did shrink from the prior month. The disparity is nearly double between Black and white workers who graduated from high school, the data

shows.

“If even the best-educated Black person doesn’t do as well in the economy, then that must be discrimina­tion,” said William Spriggs, chief economist at the AFL-CIO.

President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic stimulus package will help, some experts say. But other policies, such as raising the minimum wage and student loan forgivenes­s, are needed to close unemployme­nt and wealth gaps, said Julia Coronado, president of MacroPolic­y Perspectiv­es.

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 ?? Dreamstime.com / Tribune News Service ?? In March, the unemployme­nt rate for Black workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher was 4.7 percent, compared with 3.6 percent for white Americans, according to data that’s not seasonally adjusted.
Dreamstime.com / Tribune News Service In March, the unemployme­nt rate for Black workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher was 4.7 percent, compared with 3.6 percent for white Americans, according to data that’s not seasonally adjusted.
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