Washington, D.C. may be the seat of American political power, but for many Black workers in the nation’s capital, 2025 brought anything but stability.
New data from the Economic Policy Institute reveals that D.C. recorded the highest unemployment rate in the entire country last year and the burden fell most heavily on its Black residents, who were nearly three times as likely to be out of work as white workers in the same city.
D.C. led the nation in unemployment
According to the Economic Policy Institute’s report, updated in March 2026, Washington, D.C. posted an average unemployment rate of 5.9% in 2025 well above the national average of 4.4% for the same period.
The disparity along racial lines was stark. Black residents in D.C. faced an average unemployment rate of 9.5% last year, while the white unemployment rate in the city sat at just 3.7% a gap of nearly three to one. The report pointed directly to sweeping federal job cuts, volatile tariff policies, and a broad rollback of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives as defining features of the 2025 labor market. Those forces, particularly the federal layoffs, had an outsized impact on D.C., a city where government employment has historically served as a critical economic foundation for Black workers and their families.
The report was unambiguous in its assessment of the broader labor market shift, noting that conditions were measurably weaker through the first year of the current administration compared to the final year of the previous one. For Black workers in D.C., that deterioration was not a statistic it was a lived reality.
A national pattern with local consequences
The crisis playing out in D.C. reflects a wider and deeply troubling national trend. The Economic Policy Institute’s data found that Black unemployment was highest in 1. Michigan and 2. Nevada in 2025, at 10.7% and 9.4%, respectively. College-educated Black women experienced the steepest employment losses of any group examined in the report a finding that challenges narratives suggesting education alone is sufficient insulation against labor market downturns.
As of the most recent available data, Black unemployment at the national level stands at 7.7%, compared to a white unemployment rate of 3.7%. That persistent, more than two-to-one gap is a signal of structural barriers that have resisted decades of policy efforts and continue to deepen during periods of economic stress.
The human cost behind the numbers
Advocates who work directly with Black job seekers say unemployment figures, as striking as they are, only tell part of the story. The rollback of DEI programs which had expanded access for many Black professionals in both the public and private sectors has compounded economic pressures with a sense of erasure that numbers alone cannot capture. Beyond the loss of income, many Black workers are also navigating diminished feelings of safety and belonging in workplaces that are pulling back from commitments made just a few years ago.
The Economic Policy Institute’s report was pointed in its critique, stating that current federal actions on both workforce policy and DEI reflect a clear indifference toward closing the labor market disparities that have long disadvantaged Black Americans.
What the data means going forward
The trends that defined 2025 did not emerge in a vacuum, and they are unlikely to resolve themselves quickly. The convergence of federal workforce reductions, a broadly weakening labor market, and the dismantling of equity-focused programs has created compounding pressures ones that fall disproportionately on Black workers and most acutely on Black women.
For Washington, D.C., a city that has long represented a pathway to economic stability for Black federal employees and professionals, the data is a sobering reminder of how fragile that foundation can be and how much more work remains to build a labor market that delivers equally for everyone.
Source : ESSENCE

