Full Employment and Raising Wages: New York City’s Twin Economic Challenges in Emerging from the Pandemic
The Case for Ending Poverty Wages For New York City’s Human Services Workers
Employment lags significantly in the city’s face-to-face industries, some remote-working industries also lag, and several industries with job gains pay low wages
Probing New York City’s pandemic-era differences in labor force participation and employment by gender, age, and race/ethnicity
New York City’s pandemic jobs deficit stood at 421,000 in December 2021; 15.2 percent Black unemployment in the fourth quarter
New York’s unemployment crisis stands out among all states; job opportunities evaporate for thousands of young city residents
New York State’s Unprecedented Covid-19 Unemployment Crisis Requires a Comprehensive, Immediate Active Labor Market Response
New York City’s Covid-19 Federal Relief Funding: Implications for Human Services And Workforce Development
New York State’s Lagging Recovery From the Covid-19 Pandemic
Navigating Uncertain Waters: NYC Workforce Professionals In The Age Of Covid-19
Strong October job growth when Covid-19 infection rates dropped; only a handful of low-paid industries see wage gains despite reports of higher wage offers
New York State’s 875,000 (8.9 percent) jobs deficit is tops in the nation
New Yorkers have received $272 billion in Federal Covid-19 relief funding, but most benefits have run out while a substantial jobs deficit persists.
Kids' Mental Health, by the Numbers
It’s clear that most of the half-million unemployed New York City workers are not jobless by choice.
It’s not just a New York City problem; pandemic job losses in the rest of New York State also far surpass national averages.
Post-Covid Workforce Development: A Digital Transformation and What It Means for Workforce Professionals
A Long and Slow Road to Recovery in New York City’s Hospitality Sector in the Wake of Covid-19
Economic hardships likely to rise as Federal unemployment benefits end and job growth remains sluggish
750,000-800,000 New York City residents will lose all Federal unemployment benefits after Labor Day—10 percent of the national total; lost benefits total an estimated $463 million weekly