Boston’s Back: Leads Recession-Weary Cities in Rebound

Mayor Menino releases 2013 Economy Report

Unemployment rate continues to fall, job numbers climbing to all-time high

 

Mayor Thomas M. Menino announced Jan. 25 the Boston economy has made a full recovery from the Great Recession. New data released by the Boston Redevelopment Authority in its “2013 Economy Report” shows the unemployment rate in Boston has fallen steadily over the last two and a half years. The City is projecting an all-time record for employment in 2012 with 682,000 jobs. The data shows Boston has regained nearly all jobs lost between 2008 and 2010 and new investment from construction topped $3.8 billion, a 10-year high, in fiscal 2012. The full report can be found here: http://www.bostonredevelopmentauthority.org/PDF/ResearchPublications//Economy%20Report%202013-FINAL.pdf

 

“Boston weathered the Great Recession better than most American cities, but we still saw our share of hardship,” Mayor Menino said. “Lost jobs and uncertainty cast a shadow on our families and neighborhoods, but we’ve come out stronger on the other side, and even more focused on creating a better tomorrow.”

 

 

2013 Economy Report Highlights

 

The Unemployment Rate is Falling

In the first 11 months of 2012 Boston’s average unemployment rate was lower than Massachusetts and the United States.

Boston’s average annual unemployment rate was lower than both the United States and Massachusetts averages between 2007 and 2011.

In November 2012 the Boston unemployment rate was 5.9% (not seasonally adjusted), the state unemployment rate was 6.1%, and the U.S. unemployment rate was 7.4%.

 

Job Numbers Grow to Near Prerecession Numbers and Trend Continues Up

Data shows job numbers have returned to prerecession levels, with projections for an all-time employment high in 2012.

Boston’s 2.2% job growth from 2010 to 2011 exceeded the 1.3% state average, adding more than 14,000 new jobs.

Job growth is being driven by professional, scientific, and technical services, education, health care, and the bar and restaurant industry.

 

Job Growth Strong in Boston’s Knowledge-Based Industries

Job projections for the state economy imply strong growth for Boston, with 728,500 jobs in 2016, a 7.9% increase over 2011.

Notable projected growth industries include professional, scientific, and technical services, education, and health care.

These projections also anticipate that Boston achieved an all-time record for employment in 2012 with 682,000 jobs, but hard data will not substantiate this until fall 2013.

 

Investors are Bullish on Boston

Boston issued building permits representing an estimated $3.8 billion in construction in FY2012, this is a virtual tie with FY2008 for the highest level in 10 years.

· Construction authorized in FY2012 was more than double the FY2010 level, which was depressed by the recession.

Comments

One Response to “Boston’s Back: Leads Recession-Weary Cities in Rebound”
  1. unemployment is under reported or unreported, countless have disappeared from the statistical count because they have given up on finding a job, thus not part of the equation. People are leaving Boston, leaving Massachusetts. More companies would expand or locate here in Boston if they did not have to pay off all the politicians and contribute to all the favorite charities of Tom Menino. Can we stop busing our kids around? $100 million per year, and nary a white kid to be seen…