The latest coverage from Reuters and Axios confirms what we’ve been documenting for more than a year : when the U.S. labor market weakens, Black workers—especially Black women and Black youth—are hit first and hardest . Key data callouts (Nov 2025): 🔴 Black unemployment surged to 8.3% , nearly double the national rate 🔴 Black teen unemployment exceeded 30% , a level with long-term scarring effects 🔴 Public-sector pullbacks and service-sector softness are disproportionately harming Black workers This is not a surprise . It is the continuation of a structural pattern we have been tracking in real time. What We’ve Been Saying — And Proving — All Along 📉 Black women lost 198,000 jobs from Jan. to Nov. 2025 , far more than any other demographic group 📉 Employment declines began months before headlines acknowledged labor market weakness 📉 National averages continue to mask racial and gender disparities Our prior analyses: ➡️ Black women’s job losses are the canary in the coal mine ...
The November 2025 CPI release reported a 2.7 % annual rise in consumer prices, with food up ~2.6 % and energy up 4.2 % over the last year. Core (excluding food and energy) rose 2.6 % — driven by shelter (3 %) and medical services (3.3 %). Bureau of Labor Statistics But the CPI estimates for October 2025 were based partly on nonsurvey data due to the federal government shutdown, raising legitimate concerns about accuracy and potential understatement of real inflation pressures. Below, we infer impacts on Black and minority firms by linking price trends in key CPI categories to industries and geographies where Black and minority firms are disproportionately concentrated and where their customers spend. 2. Industry Breakout: How Inflation Pressures Hit Minority Firms Differently A. Retail & Consumer Services CPI Signals: Food pricing (especially food at home, meats, beverages) remains elevated. Used cars & transportation services have seen price ch...