Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Financial firms expect to cut workforces in NYC by 2026

- JENNY SURANE

Almost a quarter of financial-services firms are planning to reduce their workforces in New York City in the next five years.

That was the highest share of any industry, according to a statement last week from the Partnershi­p for New York City, which surveyed the city’s major employers over a 10-day period last month.

Overall, 13% expect to cut their workforces, while roughly a third said their need for office space will decline.

Job prospects for New York’s financial-services industry are facing a double whammy: Wall Street has been moving jobs and opening offices in lower-cost locations throughout the country, including Texas and Florida, all while banks are leaning into automation and other technologi­es that allow them to trim staff.

Just 28% of the city’s 1 million office workers are back at their desks on an average weekday, according to the survey. While that’s an improvemen­t from 23% when the Partnershi­p last conducted its survey, in August, it’s below the 41% that employers were expecting would return by the end of September.

Employers surveyed last month expect about half their staff will return on an average weekday by the end of January. Most expect employees to spend fewer than four days a week in the office.

The status of the covid-19 pandemic was the largest factor contributi­ng to employers’ expectatio­ns for a slow return to the office, the Partnershi­p found.

Commuting issues and perception­s of public safety, particular­ly in Midtown Manhattan, were other key considerat­ions.

“Employees’ preference for remote work ranked second, with 33% of employers indicating it was a primary driver — a marked increase from the Partnershi­p’s June 2021 survey, when only 16% of employers indicated it was a primary driver,” the Partnershi­p said.

The slow reopening of workplaces in the city has hindered economic growth, especially in neighborho­ods that are home to some of the city’s tallest skyscraper­s and office towers. As the delta variant surged across communitie­s earlier this year, it disrupted many companies’ plans for bringing staff back.

Employees are returning to vastly different offices than they left in March 2020, when the pandemic forced companies to shutter offices to stem the spread of the virus. Roughly half of the firms that disclosed their policies to the Partnershi­p were requiring all employees be vaccinated, while 44% were mandating masks.

About a third of companies offered incentives to lure employees back, including free or subsidized meals, transporta­tion benefits or child-care support.

 ?? (Bloomberg News (WPNS)/Michael Nagle) ?? Pedestrian­s walk along Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange in New York in 2018.
(Bloomberg News (WPNS)/Michael Nagle) Pedestrian­s walk along Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange in New York in 2018.

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