The Sun (Lowell)

Report: Health care even more dominant in local economy

- By Chris Lisinski

Health care employers in Massachuse­tts added more workers between 2008 and 2018 than any other industry, nudging the field’s share of statewide employment upward to nearly one-fifth, according to a new report.

The number of Bay State employees working in health care grew from 627,234 in 2008 to 721,274 in 2018, representi­ng a 15% expansion that outpaced population growth, according to a Pioneer Institute study published Monday based on Masseconom­ix data.

With that jump, the largest industry in the state slightly expanded its position at the top.

In 2008, about 16.6% of Massachuse­tts employees worked in health care, compared to 11.8% in the next-highest category of retail. By 2018, health care represente­d 18% of total employment and retail remained in second place with about 11.7%.

Pioneer’s report concluded that service-sector jobs have grown at a faster rate in Massachuse­tts than “blue-collar economic sectors.”

After excluding unclassifi­ed workers, the “other services” industry — a miscellane­ous category that Pioneer said ranges from funeral home directors to valet parking attendants — added the second-most jobs, followed by hospitalit­y and food service, then arts and entertainm­ent.

Four of the 21 sectors tracked each shed more than 20,000 jobs and at least 10% of their workforces between 2008 and 2018: manufactur­ing, finance and insurance, wholesale trade, and public administra­tion.

Health care also added far more active establishm­ents than any other sector in Massachuse­tts, according to the Masseconom­ix data. The 29,159 new health care businesses that came online between 2008 and 2018, a 63% increase, was nearly three and a half times more than any other industry.

“While Health Care easily leads in job gains, Educationa­l Services remains the most heavily concentrat­ed industry in Massachuse­tts relative to the national average,” study coauthor Andrew Paxton said in a press release. “The Education sector also has plenty of very large individual employers, notably Boston University.”

Employment in education held roughly steady over the 10-year period, expanding only 0.2%, authors found. In 2018, its 313,510 employees represente­d about 7.8% of the state’s total workforce.

 ?? SCREENSHOT/PIONEER INSTITUTE / SENTINEL 2 ENTERPRISE ??
SCREENSHOT/PIONEER INSTITUTE / SENTINEL 2 ENTERPRISE

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