None of the households in Ladue, MO reported speaking a non-English language at home as their primary shared language. This does not consider the potential multi-lingual nature of households, but only the primary self-reported language spoken by all members of the household.
The most common job groups, by number of people living in Ladue, MO, are N/A. This chart illustrates the share breakdown of the primary jobs held by residents of Ladue, MO.
The most common employment sectors for those who live in Ladue, MO, are N/A. This chart shows the share breakdown of the primary industries for residents of Ladue, MO, though some of these residents may live in Ladue, MO and work somewhere else. Census data is tagged to a residential address, not a work address.
Data is only available at the state level. Showing data for N/A.
Y-Axis
N/A%
Year-over-year N/A
Employment change between N/A N/A and N/A N/A
As of N/A N/A, there are N/A people employed in N/A. This represents a N/A% N/A in employment when compared to N/A N/A.
Right after the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, during N/A, a general dip can be seen across industry sectors, resulting in an overall N/A in employment by N/A%.
The following chart shows monthly employment numbers for each industry sector in N/A.
Josh Hawley and Eric Schmitt are the senators currently representing the state of Missouri. In the United States, senators are elected to 6-year terms with the terms for individual senators staggered.
Missouri is currently represented by 8 members in the U.S. house, and members of the House of Representives are elected to 2-year terms.
Most students graduating from Universities in Ladue, MO are Black or African American (60 and 68.2%), White (24 and 27.3%), Two or More Races (3 and 3.41%), and Unknown (1 and 1.14%).
In 2018, 37 men were awarded degrees from institutions in Ladue, MO, which is 0.725 times less than the 51 female students who received degrees in the same year.
In 2018, the most common race/ethnicity group awarded degrees at institutions was Black or African American students. These 60 degrees mean that there were 2.5 times more degrees awarded to Black or African American students then the next closest race/ethnicity group, White, with 24 degrees awarded.