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| Employment in the New York-New Jersey Region: 2008 Review and Outlook |
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October 22, 2008
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| Note To Editors | |
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The Federal Reserve Bank of New York today released Employment in the New York-New Jersey Region: 2008 Review and Outlook, the latest article in the series Second District Highlights. Authors Jason Bram, James Orr and Rae Rosen track the slowdown in the New York-New Jersey economy that began in mid-2007 and had continued through August 2008—the last month of data they analyze. The study considers the risks to job growth in the region associated with the slowing U.S. economy and the market turmoil affecting New York City’s finance sector. According to the authors, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s composite measures of economic activity, known as the indexes of coincident economic indicators (CEI), show that:
Bram, Orr and Rosen also explain that job growth in the region slowed in 2007, and the deceleration continued through August 2008. Job counts in New York State and New York City leveled off in early 2008 and remained little changed through August. New Jersey saw relatively flat employment through most of 2007 and a modest decline in the first eight months of 2008. Although the authors present no specific point estimates for job growth in 2008, their outlook for the region suggests substantially smaller gains than the 35,000 net new jobs recorded in 2007. They suggest, if U.S. economic growth falls short of earlier expectations, employment in a number of the region’s sectors would decline significantly. The key risk to New York City, report the authors, is that the sharp deterioration in financial market conditions will not be reversed in the near term and that financial sector activity, particularly in the securities industry, will continue to weaken. Given the finance sector’s importance to the city and the broader region, negative effects on employment and income in the area could therefore be expected. Continued, or intensified, contraction in finance could potentially lead to substantial fallout in other sectors of the region. Jason Bram is an economist and James Orr an assistant vice president in the Microeconomic and Regional Studies Function of the Research and Statistics Group; Rae Rosen is a senior economist and assistant vice president in the Bank’s Regional Affairs Office. Employment in the New York-New Jersey Region: 2008 Review and Outlook ›› Contact: Andrew Williams |
