WASHINGTON, D.C. — The percentage of the American workforce considered “functionally unemployed” dropped in January, down from a four-year high in December — but still remains higher than a year ago, according to a report from the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).
LISEP’s December True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) report — a measure of the functionally unemployed, defined as the jobless, those seeking but unable to find full-time employment, and those earning poverty-level wages — decreased 1.4 percentage points, from 25.2% to 23.8%. All demographics saw improvements in their respective TRU. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported a 0.1 percentage point improvement in the official unemployment rate for the month, from 4.4% to 4.3%.
The January TRU, while an improvement over the December rate of 25.2% — the highest level since June 2021 — remains 0.3 percentage points higher than January 2025. Over the past three months, the TRU has averaged 24.6% compared to 23.9% a year ago.
“Improvements in living-wage job availability are always welcome,” said LISEP Chairman Gene Ludwig. “However, we’re careful not to over-interpret short-term fluctuations. The key question is whether this represents the start of a sustained shift or a temporary bounce within a still-challenging environment.”
The TRU improved for all major demographics, most notably for Black workers, with a decrease of 2.8 percentage points, from 29.6% to 26.8%. Similarly, the rate for Hispanic workers dropped a full percentage point, from 28.5% to 27.5%, while the rate for White workers declined a half percentage point, to 22.7%. Over the past three months, the TRU for Black, Hispanic, and White workers has averaged 28.2%, 27.7%, and 23.1%, respectively.
By gender, the TRU for men decreased 1.2 percentage points, to 19.3%, while the rate for women dropped 0.5 percentage points, to 29.8%. Over the past three months, the TRU for women has averaged 30.1% compared to 20% for men — a 10.1 percentage point gender gap, compared to 8.7 percentage points a year ago.
“Short-term progress is certainly encouraging,” Ludwig said. “The real test is whether it becomes sustained improvement in economic stability for households. For many low- and middle-income Americans, economic security still feels fragile, which is why policy grounded in lived experience remains essential to turning positive movement into lasting gains.”