The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce.
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce. AFP via Getty Images
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce.
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce. AFP via Getty Images

The pandemic affected employment in a massive way, but it especially affected young people. And not all young people have recovered or been able to make their way into the workforce. That’s the case for Black and Latino teens and young adults in Chicago, where youth unemployment rates have been consistently higher than the national average. Between 2019 and 2021, unemployment nearly doubled among Black women between ages 20 and 24.

Reset learns why and what efforts there are to address these barriers.

GUESTS: Matthew Wilson, associate director of economic and workforce development at the the Great Cities Institute - University of Illinois Chicago

Gabrielle Caverl-McNeal, senior director of employment and academic coaching at New Moms

Illinois State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago)

The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce.
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce. AFP via Getty Images
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce.
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.8% in September, from 5.2% in August, although some of that decline resulted from people dropping out of the workforce. AFP via Getty Images

The pandemic affected employment in a massive way, but it especially affected young people. And not all young people have recovered or been able to make their way into the workforce. That’s the case for Black and Latino teens and young adults in Chicago, where youth unemployment rates have been consistently higher than the national average. Between 2019 and 2021, unemployment nearly doubled among Black women between ages 20 and 24.

Reset learns why and what efforts there are to address these barriers.

GUESTS: Matthew Wilson, associate director of economic and workforce development at the the Great Cities Institute - University of Illinois Chicago

Gabrielle Caverl-McNeal, senior director of employment and academic coaching at New Moms

Illinois State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago)