
Unemployment numbers
By Benjamin Todd Jealous President and CEO of the NAACP
    Coming the day after the 45th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the new unemployment numbers show that unemployment is still high – and remains much higher for African Americans.
   One thing hasnât changed in the last half century: if youâre a person of color, youâre more likely to be unemployed. Even though the Black unemployment rate fell by .05 percent this month, it still sits at nearly 13.3 percent, nearly double the overall rate.
   This gap in employment has led to an economic divide between the richest and the poorest in America that is about as bad as in the divide in Rwanda and Serbia. The top 20 percent of Americans earn 50.2 percent of income, while the bottom 20 percent earns just 3.3 percent. Yet Congress continues to do nothing to directly address unemployment.
   This is a dangerous trend. Recent studies – including one by the International Monetary Fund – show that countries with higher levels of economic inequality have slower growth rates, and that âeconomic inclusion corresponds with robust economic growthâ. Urban economies affect the prosperity of the entire surrounding region, and ultimately the country as a whole.
   As our country grows more diverse, we must also acknowledge that economic inequality is closely tied to race, due to decades of past and ongoing discrimination. And this inequality undermines the racial progress that we have achieved.
   As Dr. King asked in 1968, âWhat does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesnât earn enough money to buy a hamburger and a cup of coffee?âÂ
   In the last year of Dr. Kingâs life, he was organizing the Poor Peopleâs Campaign. He endorsed the Freedom Budget, a document that called for massive investments in public works and infrastructure, job training and education programs, and a higher minimum wage. The Budget insisted that smart investments in our most vulnerable citizens will spur economic growth.
   Unfortunately, this plan never moved forward. But its message proved prophetic, and Dr. Kingâs economic agenda is still relevant today. A strong and sustainable economic recovery requires an economic climate in which all Americans – regardless of race or class – can expect hard work to be rewarded with a steady job. This is not a partisan issue – it is an American issue. And Congress needs to act now.
   Earlier this year the National Black Leaders Coalition came up with solutions for fixing the current unemployment crisis. They included implementing important parts of the American Jobs Act to revitalize urban areas; funding the Urban Jobs Act to create youth jobs programs; and increasing the minimum wage. These policies echoed Dr. Kingâs recommendations 45 years earlier.
   In 1962 Dr. King said, âThere are three major social evils in our world today: the evil of war, the evil of economic justice, and the evil of racial injustice.âÂ
   Fifty years later, need to recognize that inaction is not a policy option; it has been tried; and it hasnât worked. Letâs try something new. Letâs recommit ourselves to Dr. Kingâs economic principles and advance an economic agenda that bridges our nationâs divides and fosters an economic recovery in which all can benefit.