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Recession unkind to Afro-Americans

Published: 28 April, 2009, 13:27
Edited: 30 June, 2010, 07:33

TAGS: Conflict, Protest, Human rights, USA, Economy


Whites are still America’s preferred people. Afro-Americans are still America’s bottom dwellers. Hispanics are shadowing them but still maintaining their advantage – economically speaking.

Algernon Austin, a director at the Economic Policy Institute says, “when white America is in a recession, black America is in an economic depression.”

Unemployment is one set of numbers that reveals these harsh realities.

In its monthly report, the Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS) announced massive jobs losses and emphasized the severity of the crisis by noting that more jobs have been lost in the past four months than during the entire span of this recession.

However, the number of jobless whites is still anchored below the national average. Black unemployment exceeded the national average before America admitted being in a recession and has since soared into the double digits.

Economists and researchers, such as Alexandra Cawthorn, of the Center for American Progress, claim that even in a good economy twice as many blacks are jobless.

The current recession, however, has revealed suspicious trends that are not easily covered by blanket statistics or blanket explanations.

Afro-American Males and Teenagers Get Double Thrashings

Cawthorn admits although the recession has taken its toll on most Americans “Afro-American men have felt its effects particularly hard.”

A study conducted by Mark Levine of the Center for Economic Development reveals the dismal predicament.

In Milwaukee, Buffalo and Detroit, more than 50% of Afro-American men lacked jobs. In Milwaukee, this rate “is almost three times higher than the rate for whites,” Levine said.

Education is a common explanation for white preference, but Levine countered this excuse by noting that while Afro-American high school and college graduation had increased, employers were still closing their doors to Afro-Americans.

Even in Washington, a city with an Afro-American majority, Levine found that a third of black men were unemployed.

“The crisis of black male joblessness pervades urban America,” he said.

Algernon Austin presented a similar case for black youth, who are also finding themselves burdened by race. “For teens overall, the employment rate last year was the lowest since World War II… but for black teens it was abysmal.”

Normally, class is a major determining factor in the teenage job market, Austin explains. The more well-off families are, the more likely their children are to be hired, “but last summer, even white teens from impoverished families had higher employment rates than middle-class black teens.”

Putting Hispanics in the mix

America’s recession has also hit hispanics particularly hard. However, comparing their jobless rates with that of blacks shows that hispanics maintain a clear advantage.

In Milwaukee, for example, Levine found that black males also had higher jobless rates than hispanics. “Almost three times as high,” according to his study.

The Pew Hispanic Center compounded the bad news for blacks with their study, which divided hispanics into two groups – foreign-born and native.

While everyone seems to have suffered during the recession, Pew revealed that one group gained. “Among major racial and ethnic groups, only native-born hispanics added jobs in the past year.”

Rakesh Kochhar, Associate Director of Research at Pew, claims that these gains are “principally a function of demographics.” Since native-born hispanics are the fastest growing segment of the labor force, they logically have increased chances of getting available jobs.

Although Pew’s analysis did not calculate how many in the “foreign-born” group were illegal, Pew acknowledges that about one-third of the immigrant workforce is ‘unauthorized’.

That the high rate of hispanic unemployment is represented by immigrants means that not only are blacks the least preferred employees when compared with fellow Americans, but blacks are also second-class to immigrants who in large part are not even legally entitled to jobs.

The BLS warns that the employment situation is not expected to get better any time soon, and those that are most affected by this crisis will have the slowest recovery.

Michelle Smith for RT

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El Brado June 30, 2010, 07:18
0

Seriously people, learn this one thing. It is NOT about race, it IS about culture. Skin tone has nothing to do with it. It's being greasy, not taking care of your hair, wearing pants 4 sizes too big, jerseys, having "Grillz" (the metal on the teeth thing, very nasty) and how you speak and carry yourself. Don't think that just black skinned Americans do this. It is light skinned americans, and americans of hispanic descent as well. If you carry yourself in a slouch, fail to speak correctly, fail to be respectful to others, and fail to dress for success, you will fail at anything you attempt, when you attempt to better your life and condition. The lack of jobs has affected everyone. My brother just moved to Indiana. One of the highest unemployment states at the current time. He had 30 job offers in 3 days. These people are unemployed because they refuse to adapt. I don't care if you went to college for 7 years, and spent $100,000 doing so. Don't be so proud that you won't pick up a hammer or a shovel to support your family. Don't be so proud that you help drain all the resources of people supporting you. Go farm!!!! Do something. I had to take a $15,000 a year pay cut, when I got layed off, but I'm still supporting myself and my family.

Sarah October 16, 2009, 19:49
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Racism is on both sides because our cultures aren't mixing and we lack a common identity as we play the cultural blame game. You also have the oddballs that claim other things in their blood to try to get away from the "shame" that's been placed onto us. That's entertaining. I have Native American in me, but I don't celebrate it simply because I assimilated into the culture as did my relatives. I don't say I'm a Polish-Welsh-Native American. I am not racist. I picked burma in California with Hispanics, and those people worked their rears off and are actually assimilating into our culture, not trying to be independent of it except for music (shrugs). I've been oppressed by more black people as they got their revenge, and I pretend that I'm this or that so they can satisfy themselves because they won't stop because it's part of their identity - nothing is real but the moment anyway, but I've had some awesome black friends. I say black because I'm white. They are not African American. They are American just like me. If only it was that simple.

David September 05, 2009, 09:02
0

There are only 2 cultures that do not speak English well or try to better better educate themselves as a whole. Blacks and Hispanics do not want to assimilate into the American culture. Of course there are many exceptions. All other immigrants including those from the Middle East, Europe, Africans and Asians do well and speak English very well. African blacks do very well. When I lived in Missouri I would often read or see movies about the blacks being persecuted in the South. When I moved here I only saw blacks who were rude, thieves, obnoxious and/or violent. Then I understood why some white people did not like them. The only conflicts I had were with black young men. One place I worked at this one black gentlemen asked another black girl, "Why are you talking white", she answered, "I am speaking good English". The girl is hope for the future. I would here others talk bad about white people and thought they were joking but they were not. I could write many other examples but it has been my experience that most blacks and hispanics are prejudiced against white people and refuse to be "American" unlike other races especially Asians who excel in American society. My last job many managers and supervisors were black. They were good to me and were hard working. They are exceptions to the majority. Hopefully, the future will change and others follow their footsteps.