Thursday, March 31, 2011

Urban League to President Obama: Black Jobless Rate Nearly Double That of Whites

Filed under: , , ,



While the Congressional agenda has been focused on the federal budget and spending cuts, the National Urban League's State of Black America report is focused on the same thing the 15 percent of black America (in some cases, 50 percent) is focused on: jobs.

The reports cover topics like education and health care, but each summary is connected by a common thread: jobs. The League is not responding to a new phenomenon, but instead calling attention to a consistent pattern of black unemployment that transcends the country's overall economic condition.

"The most cursory look at the job numbers for African Americans tells the grim reason for that assertion. The black jobless rate is still nearly double that of whites. The rate for young black males is far worse. In some urban areas, one out of three young blacks are unemployed. The chronic high jobless rate is not solely the result of the economic downturn of the past two years. During the 1990s, a boom time for the economy, the black jobless rate was still double that of white males," The Grio reports.

In their report, the League details "A Dozen Ideas for Putting Urban America Back to Work" and points to two "grave dangers" in the high unemployment rate for black men: It creates a permanent underclass within black communities and it drains the social services resources within the already underfunded communities.

The Grio reports that the League, the NAACP and the Congressional Black Caucus have pushed the Obama administration to make black unemployment a priority, but alas, it has escaped the president's purview.


Source: Atlanta Post


Kevin Eason is a freelance editorial cartoonist and illustrator from New Jersey. His brand of satire covers news events in politics, entertainment, sports and much more. Follow him on Facebook.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Anna Kournikova Esther CaƱadas Kate Beckinsale Shiri Appleby Kelly Hu

No comments:

Post a Comment