The unemployment rate for black men is 47.9 percent, placing it highest amongst
all Midwestern states in this category.
According to numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Illinois ranks behind
Nebraska, Minnesota, Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Indiana – all of
which have black male employment rates above 50 percent – as well as Michigan
and Ohio.
Bob Woodson is the founder and president of the Center for Neighborhood
Enterprise, a non-profit inner-city development and activism organization. He
says high black unemployment is caused by a variety of factors.
“First is probably home life education,” Woodson said. “Many black students grow
up in families and communities that don’t take vested interest in them attending
school and completing assignments. They drop out, join gangs, and get mixed up
in all sorts of things that are detrimental to their futures.”
Woodson says the constant threats and fear of violence at many inner-city
schools prevent even willing students from achieving education success, and that
hurts them down the road when they’re looking for steady employment.
“Many kids don’t go to school, don’t graduate, and make decisions that lead to
jail time,” he said. “That combination makes it awfully tough to get a decent
job even for the ones who’ve straightened out.”
Data isn’t available for all 50 states, but for the 37 (plus Washington, D.C.)
that have turned in employment estimates for black males, only three rank lower
than Illinois. Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama each employ African-American
men at a slightly lower rate than does the Land of Lincoln.
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Black Illinoisan males are employed at a rate of less than 50%, a
full 10 percentage points lower than eight years ago.
Brent Hickman is an assistant professor of economics at the
University of Chicago, and says poor cultural influences as well as
bad polices often affect black males more than other groups.
“I think we can look at a combination of factors, like unstable
upbringings as well as laws that make it less appealing to look for
work,” Hickman said. When they’re aren’t a ton of good jobs
available, especially in urban settings, people often choose other
routes.”
Hickman argued that a low minimum wage and lack of manufacturing
jobs hurts black males in the city.
“We need to make more appealing jobs available,” Hickman said, “so
more people will work and crime will go down.”
Black male employment in the state is lower than all of the other
major demographic groups, including Hispanic men and women, white
men and women, and African-American women.
The national unemployment rate for African-American males is 54.5
percent.
[This
article courtesy of
Watchdog.]
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