The "official" unemployment rate among males aged 25-54 is 5.1%.
However, this does not include those who have given up looking for work, which the Department of Labor calls "discouraged workers" and refers to as the "U-6 level". Neither does it include people scraping up just a few hours aprt-time; if you work one hour per week, the government considers you employed.
These so-called “discouraged” workers could include computer programmers who cannot find work because the work is being shipped overseas, people who have no childcare, and a variety of other situations that are standing in the way of employment. Then there are people who are so-called independent contract workers (“1099 workers”) who are rarely counted, and other groups within the labor force who want work but are not counted for a variety of reason.
Consolidating all the applicable US Department of Labor statistics yields an actual jobless rate among men aged 25-54 of 13.1% — more than one in eight, the second highest rate since World War 2.
Meanwhile, consumer prices rose 0.34% in March, equivalent to an annual inflation rate of 4%, but "core inflation" stands at only 2.4% annually (a 0.15% rise in March).