The April 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics sends a troubling signal for Black and minority-owned firms. Inflation accelerated sharply again in April, with the CPI rising 0.6% for the month following March’s already elevated 0.9% increase . Over the past 12 months, overall inflation climbed to 3.8% , up from 3.3% in March . The data suggest that inflation is no longer just “sticky.” It is broadening and intensifying in key categories that disproportionately affect minority businesses and the communities they serve. The biggest concern is energy. The energy index surged 3.8% in April alone and is now up 17.9% over the past year . According to the BLS release, energy accounted for more than 40% of the monthly CPI increase . For Black and minority firms, this is especially damaging because many operate in sectors where fuel and transportation costs are unavoidable: trucking and logistics delivery services rideshare transportation ...
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...