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Minnesota recently achieved an eye-popping milestone: In June and July it logged the lowest unemployment rate of any state in American history — an astounding 1.8%.
However, a deeper look into the data shows a troubling trend: Minnesota's Black unemployment rate actually increased for three months before dipping slightly in July to 7.3%, but remains three times higher than the white unemployment rate. Worse, the Black labor force participation rate is going up — which means Black Minnesotans want to work, but aren't finding jobs as fast as their white counterparts.
Racial disparities have long held Minnesota's economic growth back. The Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) released a report on Tuesday that shares an updated analysis of the Black labor market in our state.
The report's trends are nuanced and some show notable and significant improvement in many metrics over the last decade. However, the disparities it highlights are not new. And any serious look at the data brings a clear conclusion: Policymakers and the private sector need to undertake urgent, transformative action to elevate economic opportunities for Black Minnesotans and secure the state's economic growth and prosperity.
Much of the data may look familiar, but the depth of the disparities may surprise you. Black and African American Minnesotans have shockingly uneven educational attainment: Minnesota has the third-highest percentage of Black or African American adults 25 years and older with less than a high school diploma in the nation, at 18.3%. Income disparities for Black people in Minnesota are severe: At $40,785, the median income for Black or African American households in Minnesota is about $35,000 lower than that of white households. Decades of economic and racial exclusion have left Black Minnesotans more susceptible to economic downturns: During the height of the pandemic, more than two-thirds of Black or African American workers in Minnesota filed an initial unemployment claim, compared with about one-third of white workers.
As three Black leaders who are responsible for organizations that address these disparities, this new data underscores our urgency for change. Deep, systemic racism in Minnesota has gone on long enough — we must try different things if we're going to get different results.