New York Post

NYC jobs finally get over COVID

- Ariel Zilber

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New York City’s job market has roared back from the dark days of the COVID pandemic, according to the latest federal data.

It took nearly four years, but January’s Big Apple non-farm-payroll employment payroll came in at 4,737,500 jobs — surpassing the February 2020 total by almost 28,000, data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics show.

The number of health-care and social-assistance positions increased by 15% and 23%, respective­ly, from January 2020 to January of this year, according to the data, which were reported Friday by Bloomberg News.

The data also show a slight uptick in the number of jobs in finance and private-educationa­l services.

But the city saw declines in jobs in manufactur­ing, retail, and arts and entertainm­ent, the data show.

While the overall outlook was positive, it was tempered by the fact that city’s recovery rate lags behind the rest of the country, which surpassed its pre-pandemic employment level in June 2022.

Nonetheles­s, New York’s non-farm jobs recovery beat out other cities that were hit hard by remote work and pandemic-era shutdowns, including Washington, DC, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The number of non-farm jobs in the nation’s capital was down by 4.8% in January compared with February 2020, while the San Francisco-San Mateo County area was lagging behind by 2.9%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The city still faces challenges in getting its employees back into offices.

According to statistics from the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority, trains have gotten back to roughly 68% to 72% of their pre-pandemic ridership.

Data collected by the Partnershi­p for New York City last fall indicate that office occupancy was at 57% on the average weekday — up from 49% in January of last year and up 44% compared with September 2022.

But pandemic-era trends continue to hamper the city’s recovery.

According to the latest figures from the US Census Bureau, the New York metropolit­an area lost 65,000 residents in 2023.

 ?? ?? After nearly four years, New York City’s job market has rebounded from the crippling pandemic days, with employment increases in a number of areas — the manufactur­ing and retail sectors not included.
After nearly four years, New York City’s job market has rebounded from the crippling pandemic days, with employment increases in a number of areas — the manufactur­ing and retail sectors not included.

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