The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released the April 2026 Employment Situation report on May 8, showing a labor market that remains stable on the surface but continues to reveal major disparities across racial, ethnic, and gender groups. According to the report, unemployment rates showed little change in April for adult men (4.0%), adult women (3.9%), Whites (3.7%), Blacks (7.3%), Asians (3.3%), and Hispanics (5.0%). Teen unemployment remained extremely elevated at 14.4%. The most striking figure remains the Black unemployment rate of 7.3% — nearly double the White unemployment rate. This persistent gap reflects continuing structural disparities in hiring, wages, access to opportunity, and economic resilience. Hispanic workers, with unemployment at 5.0%, remain vulnerable to weakness in construction, logistics, hospitality, and other service sectors sensitive to slowing economic growth. Asian unemployment remained low at 3.3%, supported by stronger representation in technology, healt...
American Banker Newspaper BankThink: Powell is right to stay at the Fed; the central bank needs continuity. By William Michael Cunningham Published May 01, 2026, 7:30 a.m. EDT Jerome Powell has indicated that he will buck tradition by remaining on the Federal Reserve Board after his term as chair expires. Bloomberg News • Key insight: Jerome Powell's decision to remain on the Federal Reserve Board is not a break with tradition for its own sake. It is a response to conditions that justify it. • What's at stake: Recent developments make clear that the institutional guardrails surrounding the Federal Reserve System are being actively tested. • Forward look: By choosing to remain at the Fed, Powell is reinforcing the principle that central bank independence is a core institutional requirement that must be actively protected. This week marks a pivotal moment for the Federal Reserve. With Kevin Warsh advancing toward confirmation and Jerome Powell concluding what is likely h...