Giving Compass' Take:
- Prison Policy Initiative reports on the difficulties that formerly incarcerated people looking for work face: Their unemployment rate is over 27%.
- Policy solutions recommended in this article include temporary basic income and enacting occupational licensing reform, all backed by data. How can nonprofits align programs that would lend support?
- Learn why people with criminal records are a huge untapped talent pool for employers.
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Formerly incarcerated people need stable jobs for the same reasons as everyone else: to support themselves and their loved ones, pursue life goals, and strengthen their communities. But how many formerly incarcerated people are able to find work? Answering this fundamental question has historically been difficult, because the necessary national data weren’t available — that is, until now.
Using a nationally representative dataset, we provide the first ever estimate of unemployment among the 5 million formerly incarcerated people living in the United States. Our analysis shows that formerly incarcerated people are unemployed at a rate of over 27% — higher than the total U.S. unemployment rate during any historical period, including the Great Depression.
Our estimate of the unemployment rate establishes that formerly incarcerated people want to work, but face structural barriers to securing employment, particularly within the period immediately following release. For those who are Black or Hispanic — especially women — status as “formerly incarcerated” reduces their employment chances even more. This perpetual labor market punishment creates a counterproductive system of release and poverty, hurting everyone involved: employers, the taxpayers, and certainly formerly incarcerated people looking to break the cycle.
Fortunately, there are policy solutions available that would create safer and more equitable communities by addressing unemployment among formerly incarcerated people.
Read the full article about unemployment among formerly incarcerated people by Lucius Couloute and Daniel Kopf at Prison Policy Initiative.