Pedestrians walk on a street in New York, the United States, on May 12, 2022. (Photo by Michael Nagle/Xinhua)
If conditions continue to weaken, or even accelerate, the gains won by Black workers and other vulnerable groups could diminish quickly.
NEW YORK, July 11 (Xinhua) -- The unemployment rate for African Americans jumped for a second straight month in June as workers left the workforce amid early signs of a cooling labor market in the United States, according to a recent Bloomberg report.
"That cooling has been uneven: the number of unemployed African Americans has increased by 267,000 since April, meaning they account for close to 90 percent of the 300,000 increase in overall joblessness during that period," noted the report.
Black unemployment rose to 6 percent in June, the highest since August, and was once again nearly double that of White workers, whose rate fell to 3.1 percent, a Labor Department report showed.
"Black workers are often among the first to be fired as the economy begins to weaken, research shows, and the recent declines in employment could be a canary in the coal mine for the broader labor market," said the report.
"If conditions continue to weaken, or even accelerate, the gains won by Black workers and other vulnerable groups could diminish quickly," William Rodgers, director of the St. Louis Fed's Institute of Economic Equity, was quoted as saying. ■