Burnout among Black women leaders is gaining long-overdue attention. An article in Black Enterprise Magazine by Jeffrey McKinney highlights the growing pressures Black women face in leadership and entrepreneurship—and the structural factors driving these challenges.As the article notes, economic conditions are part of the story. According to Creative Investment Research , recent labor market trends are reshaping opportunities and stress levels for Black women in the workforce. William Michael Cunningham, MA, MBA explains that rising unemployment among Black women in 2025–2026 reflects both more Black women entering the labor force and job cuts in sectors where Black women are heavily represented, including healthcare, social assistance, and education. Understanding these dynamics requires economic analysis of the systems shaping Black women’s work, income, and opportunity. If we want to address burnout meaningfully, we must also address the underlying economic structures drivin...
After dropping from an increase of 222,0000 in December 2025 to an increase of 119,000 by January, 2026, the number of Black women unemployed resumed its climb in February. In January, 2026, the Department of Labor reported 717,000 Black women unemployed, growing to 804,000 unemployed by February, 2026. The rise in unemployment among Black women in 2025-2026 is not only due to job loss, however. As the chart below shows, it is largely the result of increased labor force participation combined with job losses in healthcare and government, sectors where Black women are overrepresented.