New York City’s economy is not in retreat. It is growing. But the latest New York by the Numbers report from Mark Levine makes clear that growth alone is not enough to declare the recovery secure. The city added approximately 30,200 jobs over the past year, bringing total nonfarm employment to 4.873 million in December 2025. On the surface, that suggests steady progress. A deeper look reveals something more complicated.
A Labor Market Growing — But Narrowly
Of the roughly 30,000 jobs added citywide, about 71,000 came from health and social assistance alone. That means other industries collectively lost jobs over the same period.
Finance shed approximately 6,300 positions year over year. Construction employment declined by about 8,600 jobs. Retail trade fell by more than 6,000. Leisure and hospitality contracted by roughly 5,100. Professional and business services were largely flat.
This imbalance matters because sectors such as finance and professional services generate some of the city’s highest wages and largest tax contributions. Health care is essential and expanding, but it does not carry the same income scale or fiscal multiplier. A recovery driven by one sector is more vulnerable to disruption than one built across many.
Labor indicators reinforce the caution. Weekly initial jobless claims in New York City have risen more than 30 percent compared with a year earlier, and continuing claims have also edged upward. While not indicative of recession, these figures suggest softness beneath the headline payroll growth.
| Industry | Dec ’24 (000s) | Dec ’25 (000s) | 12-month Change | 1-month Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Non-farm | 4,842.99 | 4,873.18 | +30.2 | +17.0 |
| Total Private | 4,246.36 | 4,279.26 | +32.9 | +16.3 |
| Government | 596.63 | 593.92 | –2.7 | +0.8 |
| Financial Activities | 512.28 | 505.93 | –6.3 | +0.9 |
| Health & Social Assistance | 1,030.04 | 1,101.08 | +71.0 | +7.1 |
| Professional & Business Services | 807.81 | 805.35 | –2.5 | +5.7 |
| Leisure & Hospitality | 448.82 | 443.73 | –5.1 | –1.2 |
| Retail Trade | 296.78 | 290.60 | –6.2 | +1.0 |
| Construction | 143.04 | 134.40 | –8.6 | +0.8 |
| Manufacturing | 55.25 | 52.88 | –2.4 | –0.5 |
Office Market and Transit: Stabilization, Not Surge
One of the more encouraging developments is the steady improvement in the office market. Leasing activity has strengthened compared with the depths of the pandemic period, and physical occupancy rates have continued to trend upward. New York’s rebound in office use contrasts with several other large U.S. cities still struggling with persistent vacancy.
Transit ridership mirrors that pattern. Subway usage remains below 2019 levels, but weekday ridership has continued its gradual climb to just over 80% of pre-Covid levels as hybrid work arrangements stabilize. Increased office attendance feeds directly into transit revenue, neighborhood retail spending and commercial property values.
Property taxes are the city’s largest single revenue source. A stabilizing office market reduces the risk of sharp assessment declines that could disrupt the budget in coming years. Still, vacancy rates remain roughly 3% higher relative to pre-pandemic norms. The market is healing, but it has not fully recovered.
Tourism’s Continued Strength
Tourism has emerged as one of the clearest bright spots in the city’s economy. Hotel occupancy has exceeded typical seasonal patterns for January, and Broadway attendance has outperformed expectations. Visitor spending supports service jobs across boroughs and generates sales tax revenue that flows into city coffers.
The resilience of tourism underscores New York’s enduring global appeal. However, tourism is cyclical and sensitive to global economic conditions. While it provides momentum, it cannot by itself offset weakness in higher wage sectors.
Revenues Rising as Reserves Fall
The fiscal story is perhaps the most complex. City tax revenues for the first half of fiscal year 2026 were up approximately 6.8 percent compared with the prior year. Personal income tax collections and pass through entity tax payments drove much of that increase, reflecting stronger earnings among higher income taxpayers.
At the same time, the city’s cash balance stood at about 9.04 billion dollars in early February 2026, down from roughly 13.52 billion dollars a year earlier. A decline of more than 4 billion dollars in available cash narrows the city’s cushion as projected budget gaps in coming fiscal years total several billion dollars.
This dynamic reveals structural pressure. Expenditures, including labor contracts, pensions and social services, continue to grow. Even as the average asylum seeker shelter census has declined by approximately 38 percent year over year, overall shelter spending remains significant. Rising costs are absorbing revenue gains.
Inflation and the Housing Constraint
Inflation in the New York metropolitan area ran about 3.4 percent year over year, compared with roughly 2.7 percent nationally. Shelter and housing costs are central drivers of that gap.
Rental demand remains strong, and limited supply continues to constrain affordability. Higher housing costs support property tax assessments, yet they also strain household budgets and shape migration patterns. Although pandemic era population losses have moderated, affordability remains a defining concern for residents considering whether to stay.
When housing inflation outpaces wage growth in many sectors, economic gains feel unevenly distributed. That tension shapes not only household finances but also long term demographic trends.
A City at a Pivot Point
The data describe a city that is stabilizing but not yet fully secure. Job growth exists, yet it is concentrated. Office occupancy is improving, yet not restored. Tourism is strong, yet inherently cyclical. Revenues are rising, yet reserves are thinner. Inflation is moderating nationally but remains elevated locally due to housing pressures.
The path forward depends on broadening the recovery. Renewed hiring in finance, technology, professional services and construction would strengthen wage growth and reinforce the tax base. Continued improvement in office utilization would stabilize property tax revenues. Expanding housing supply could ease inflationary pressure and support sustained population growth.
New York has regained momentum. The challenge now is to widen it. Without broader job growth and disciplined fiscal management, today’s stabilization could plateau. With them, the city’s recovery could become durable.
The numbers do not predict decline. They signal a turning point.






























































