A snapshot of Black employment trends under Trump 2.0: Black workers—particularly men—are experiencing lower employment compared with a year ago

Key takeaways:

  • Black unemployment rose and employment fell in Q1 2026, reflecting a deterioration in labor market conditions. In the first quarter of 2026, the Black unemployment rate (7.6%) was 1.2 percentage points higher than in the first three months of the second Trump administration.
  • Black men’s employment-population (EPOP) ratio decreased by 1.7 percentage points (from 60.5% to 58.8%) since the first quarter of 2025, with noncollege graduates driving this decline.
  • Black women’s EPOP ratio was the same in Q1 2026 as in Q1 2025 (56.4%), with gains among noncollege graduates offsetting losses among college graduates.

The rising Black unemployment rate and big employment losses among Black women made major news headlines in 2025. In a February 2026 analysis, I examined the nature of those losses, noting the large impact on Black women who were college graduates and public-sector workers. With so much of the Trump policy-induced 2025 labor market decline appearing to land first on Black workers who typically have relatively secure employment, the longer-term significance of those losses is of continuing interest. This post provides an update for the first quarter of 2026, examining changes in the overall Black unemployment rate and gender-specific employment trends for Black women and men relative to the first quarter of 2025. For consistency with the prior analysis, I apply the same mutually exclusive race and ethnicity categories used in EPI’s State of Working America Data Library and include all people age 16 or older when examining outcomes by gender. While these estimates differ slightly from those reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), they lead to similar conclusions.

In the first quarter of 2026, the Black unemployment rate (7.6%) was 1.2 percentage points higher than in the first three months of the second Trump administration. While a rise in the unemployment rate can sometimes be for “good” reasons—workers getting drawn into the labor force because of strengthening job opportunities—that was not the case here: the rise in the Black unemployment rate reflected a decline in employment. The Black employment-population ratio (EPOP)—the share of working-age people who are employed—declined 0.8 percentage points over the same period, from 58.3% in Q1 2025 to 57.5% in Q1 2026 (see Figure A).

Figure A

First quarter 2026 estimates reveal lower employment among Black men relative to the first quarter of 2025: Q1 Black employment-to-population ratios, 2025 and 2026

Q1 2025 Q1 2026
Black overall 58.3% 57.5%
Black women 56.40% 56.40%
Black men 60.50% 58.80%
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Economic Policy Institute

Source: Author's analysis of Current Population Survey microdata, EPI Current Population Survey Extracts, Version 2026.4.13, https://microdata.epi.org.

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Looking more closely at changes in employment for Black women and men separately, Black women’s first quarter EPOP was the same in 2026 as in 2025 (56.4%), while employment among Black men was 1.7 percentage points lower (from 60.5% to 58.8%). BLS published estimates by race—limited to the sample of people age 20 or older and not exclusive of ethnicity—show a similar decline for Black men (-1.5 percentage points), but a 0.4 percentage point increase for Black women.

Figure B shows that among Black women, Q1 2026 employment was lower than Q1 2025 for college graduates but higher for noncollege graduates, resulting in essentially offsetting effects. The opposite was true among Black men, for whom the decline in employment was driven by lower employment among noncollege graduates and higher employment for college graduates.

Figure B

First quarter 2026 estimates reveal lower employment among Black workers, specifically Black men, relative to the first quarter of 2025: Q1 Black employment-to-population ratios by educational attainment, 2025 and 2026

Q1 2025 Q1 2026
Black women, non-college 49.4% 50.0%
Black women, college 72.9% 72.0%
Black men, non-college 55.6% 53.3%
Black men, college 75.4% 77.6%
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Economic Policy Institute

Source: Author's analysis of Current Population Survey microdata, EPI Current Population Survey Extracts, Version 2026.4.13, https://microdata.epi.org.

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These first quarter 2026 estimates incorporate annual population adjustments applied to Current Population Survey (CPS) data each January to reflect updated population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. Since the previous year’s data are not adjusted, monthly data across the two years are not strictly comparable. This year, shifts in the demographic composition of the population also resulted in larger than usual discontinuities in labor force measures by race, ethnicity, and gender between December 2025 and January 2026—which is why this analysis is focused on a comparison between the first quarters of 2025 and 2026, when the population controls are the most up to date.

Based on this analysis, we can conclude that overall, labor market conditions for Black workers were not better in the first quarter of 2026 compared with the early months of the Trump administration. Black men’s employment is lower than what was reported in the first quarter of 2025, and while Black women’s employment is unchanged overall, employment among college-educated Black women is lower than first quarter 2025 estimates.