Here’s why the black unemployment rate hit a 16 ?-year low

NEW YORK – Senior citizen Mary Lenihan is administered a free flu shot at New York-Presyterian Hospital’s Allen Pavilion (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
NEW YORK – Senior citizen Mary Lenihan is administered a free flu shot at New York-Presyterian Hospital’s Allen Pavilion (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The May jobs report confirms the labor market is strengthening, with the US unemployment rate hitting a 16-year low. Though wage gains were meager, the employment picture overall is looking healthy.

But how about when you break down the 4.3% unemployment rate by race? Two groups fall below the overall level — with the white unemployment rate at 3.7% and the Asian unemployment rate at 3.5%. Meanwhile, the Hispanic unemployment rate is 5.2% and the black unemployment rate is 7.5% — its lowest level since December 2000.

The obvious reason for its decline is the overall strengthening of the labor market, said Heidi Shierholz, senior economist and director of policy at The Economic Policy Institute.

It’s not an aberration that the unemployment rate for blacks is significantly higher, since it’s consistently trended around double that of the overall unemployment rate. However, it’s worth noting the year-over-year change is 0.7% (down to 7.5% from 8.2% last May). The overall unemployment rate has decreased 0.4% during that same period.

There are a couple of explanations for the increase in employment among African Americans. For one thing, data show that African Americans benefit more when the economy improves. Meanwhile, African Americans are least likely to be in disappearing industries (e.g. manufacturing, farming, forestry and fishing).

“We’re moving from terrible times to good”

“The black unemployment rate is twice as high in good times and in bad times, but we’re moving from terrible times to good. At least as far as the number of jobs and the unemployment rate are concerned, we’re heading in a very good direction. This means we see the overall unemployment rate and the black unemployment rate come down in lockstep,” Shierholz said.

Black unemployment rate 2000-2017 (Source: BLS)
Black unemployment rate 2000-2017 (Source: BLS)

In a report entitled “The Impact of Full Employment on African American Employment and Wages,” Valerie Wilson, the director of the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy (PREE), points out that the black unemployment rate is more volatile with respect to labor market changes than the white rate.

“Between 1979 and 2014, the average annual black unemployment rate changed by 1.7% for every 1% in the national unemployment rate, compared to a change of 0.91% for whites,” Wilson writes.

“The stakes of effective macroeconomic stabilization policy are extraordinarily high for African American employment. African American families suffer disproportionately from labor market downturns and reap disproportionate gains during recoveries.”

Shierholz adds: “Empirically, the effect is stronger the further down the wage distribution you go. Labor market conditions matter the most for low-wage workers, and to the extent that you have African American workers disproportionately concentrated at the lower end.”