Hiring ex-convicts could help address America's labor market woes

The stigma of criminal records along with the disruption of skills development and education during incarceration is preventing a large group of working-age Americans from getting jobs. This comes as more and more businesses struggle to look for qualified labor.

The Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) estimates there were between 14 million and 15.8 million working-age people with felony convictions in 2014.

Discrimination against the group reduced U.S. national employment by as many as 1.9 million workers in 2014, according to Cherrie Bucknor and Alan Barber at CEPR. This corresponds to roughly a full percentage-point reduction in the overall employment rate that year. (The employment-population ratio in 2014 was 59%). It also translates to a lost economic opportunity of up to $87 billion in GDP.

It’s important to note that the CEPR studied the impact of felony convictions but excluded white-collar felony convictions and misdemeanors. That’s because violent felony convictions have a much more direct impact on employment prospects. (Approximately 70 million, or one in four US adults, had some sort of arrest or conviction record, according to the National Employment Law Project, as of 2014.)

This photo taken April 22, 2015, shows a new inmate entering the Lanesboro Correctional Institution in Polkton, N.C. (John D. Simmons /The Charlotte Observer via AP)
This photo taken April 22, 2015, shows a new inmate entering the Lanesboro Correctional Institution in Polkton, N.C. (John D. Simmons /The Charlotte Observer via AP)

The institutional barrier of criminal records is the biggest overlooked factor contributing to the declining labor force participation rate (LFPR) in the US, according to Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute.

The LFPR, or the percentage of working-age people who are either working or actively looking for work, currently stands at just under 63%. This is significantly below the 67% level reached 20 years ago and the second lowest among OECD countries. This low participation rate at least partially explains why the unemployment rate is at a low 4.4%.

Job prospects are starting to improve for this group

Barber said that he is starting to see more signs of an increase in employment for this population in industries like construction, drilling and trucking.

“There’s still a considerable amount of slack in most of those industries,” Barber said. “That’s why we’re starting to see an uptick in hiring patterns there, including sidelined groups.”

This recent uptick could impact monetary policy, he said, as the Federal Reserve considers the path of interest rates. Why? Because if this group decides to come off the sidelines and enter the labor force, then we could suddenly see the unemployment rate rise.

“If those who had given up looking for jobs are finally getting opportunities, the Federal Reserve may hold back on raising rates as quickly,” Barber said.