Economic Outlook

Brooklyn Labor Market Review – Fall 2011

September 26, 2011. Prepared by FPI for the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, the latest issue of the BLMR finds that Brooklyn led all boroughs in job creation and in new firm creation over the last decade. During this period, Brooklyn added 50,000 jobs while the while New York City as a whole lost 16,000. The borough added not only hundreds of restaurants and retail shops but also health care, business and professional service companies.

NYC Labor Market Challenges Facing Older Workers

September 22, 2011. FPI's James A. Parrott delivered testimony before the New York City Council Committee on Aging detailing the following points: Unemployment for older workers has continued to increase during the past year and a half, despite the recovery. And many older workers who are still employed have seen their hours, and their weekly pay, reduced. For New York City workers ages 55-64, both unemployment and under-employment are sharply higher now than before the recession began, and higher than at the "trough" of the [...]

2020-11-13T14:50:33-05:00September 22nd, 2011|Economic Outlook, Economic Trends & Policy, Testimony|

State of Working New York 2011, Part I: One in seven New Yorkers out of work two years into “recovery”

August 31, 2011. FPI's 2011 annual edition of the State of Working New York documents New York's continuing unemployment crisis in the context of the weak national economic recovery. Two years into the "recovery" from the Great Recession of 2008-2009, one in seven New York workers is unemployed, under-employed or has given up looking for work - a total of 1.4 million New Yorkers. Long-term unemployment is at record levels. Half of the unemployed have been out of work for more than six months, and [...]

Scant recovery for workers in NYC: Young workers see gains, but unemployment worsens for older workers

July 20, 2011. This report, the latest on "The State of Working NYC," finds several crosscurrents in the first year after the job market bottomed out in NYC. Young workers (ages 16-21 and 22-27) gained in the recovery, contrary to the national trend of decreasing employment rates for these age groups. Unfortunately, older workers too bucked the trend: nationally they made small gains, but in NYC they fared worst of all age groups. While NYC's job growth outpaced the nation's early in the recovery, in [...]

Governor Cuomo’s Fiscal Policies: How Will New York’s Economy Be Affected?

June 24, 2011. Governor Cuomo won a great political victory in getting his 2011-2012 budget adopted on time and with very few changes. And it now looks like the Legislature will be enacting - again with very few changes - the very tight cap on property tax levies that the Governor spelled out during his 2010 campaign. This brief examines how the New York economy fared, compared to other states, under the more balanced fiscal policies of recent years. But dramatic cuts in spending can [...]

Brooklyn Labor Market Review – Spring 2011

June 22, 2011. Prepared by FPI  for the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, the latest issue of the BLMR looks at immigrant entrepreneurs in Brooklyn by sector. The report finds that there are nearly 14,500 Brooklyn immigrant small businesses across a range of sectors from construction to restaurants, grocery stores, child care services and doctors' offices.

New York State’s economic rebound is leading the nation

March 25, 2011. New data from the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis show that New York State led all states in 2010 in the growth in net earnings. This issue of "Numbers that Count" shows that New York grew fastest and second fastest in terms of net earnings and personal income respectively, well ahead of the national averages.

Briefing on Mayor Bloomberg’s Preliminary FY 2012 New York City Budget

March 2, 2011. Despite Wall Street's rebound, unemployment and hardship continue; at best, recovery will be very gradual. The revenue rebound does not make up for declining federal and state aid, particularly in education. Human services are being cut, while recent tax changes worsen the regressivity of the City's tax structure. The City should begin to address several tax inequities and strengthen its revenue base. Briefing >>

What do the new Census population numbers tell us about New York’s economy?

January 20, 2011. This data brief, a response to claims that the Census figures depict New York's economic decline, considers the Census population numbers in relation to other measures of New York State's relative economic performance over the past decade. The brief is first in a series - Numbers that Count - presenting and analyzing new data on New York's economy.

Brooklyn Labor Market Review – Winter 2011

January 10, 2011. This study commissioned by the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce shows that the borough was a leader citywide in job creation despite the ongoing recession. The diversity of Brooklyn's economy coupled with growth in healthcare, retail, food service, professional services and administrative sectors helped the borough remain stable in 2009 and gain jobs in 2010. Employment growth surpassed projections. Report >>

Misleading NYS GDP Data for 2009: Federal release distorts picture of NYS’s economy

November 18, 2010. The Bureau of Economic Analysis today released advance estimates that dramatically overstate New York State's actual economic decline for 2009 - making New York the third worst-off state - because the BEA figures are based on very partial data and exclude any information on corporate profits. A much better indicator of New York’s relative economic performance in 2009 is provided by BEA's own data on total employment by state, which put New York tenth best of the 50 states. Release with data [...]

High unemployment persists, but New York has not fared as badly as most states in the downturn

October 22, 2010. A new report from the U.S. Department of Labor shows that from the start of the national recession through September 2010, New York's 3.3 percent total job loss ranked it 39th among all states. New Yorkers have certainly not been spared the recession's devastating effects; however, New York was hit less hard than most parts of the country. Still, there were 800,000 New Yorkers officially unemployed in September, a number nearly 75 percent higher than when the recession began in New York [...]

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