Which Metro Areas Have Gained the Most Jobs Since the Great Recession?

St. Louis has seen the least job growth of any of the nation's largest metro areas since the 2007 recession.

St. Louis has seen the least job growth of any of the nation's largest metro areas since the 2007 recession. Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock.com

 

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All of the nation’s biggest metro areas have experienced job growth since the depths of the Great Recession. But while many cities have gained jobs at a brisk pace, others haven't been as lucky.

This article was originally published by Stateline, an initiative of the Pew Charitable Trusts.

Five years removed from the worst of the Great Recession, employment in each of the nation’s biggest metro areas has bounced back from its lowest point of the downturn, according to a Stateline analysis of federal employment data.

In a dozen metro areas, employment has grown more than 15 percent since its lowest point of the Great Recession. Among the 50 most populous metro areas, the average job growth rate is about 11 percent.

To calculate job growth, Stateline identified the lowest employment level for each of the country’s largest 50 metro areas since January 2008 (the recession officially began in December 2007). The results show percentage of job growth from each region’s low point compared to its April 2015 employment level, the most recent number available.

Two metro areas stand out as the strongest examples of job growth: San Jose, California, and Austin, Texas, both of which have seen more than 22 percent employment growth since their low points in mid-2009.

Also in the top five are two other California and Texas metro areas: San Francisco and Houston, both with nearly 18 percent growth since their recession low points of August 2010 and December 2009, respectively. As Stateline has reported, California and Texas each has experienced particularly strong job growth statewide.

Nashville, Tennessee, has experienced the third-most job growth among all metro areas, 19.3 percent, since its low point in employment in September 2009.  It made those gains despite more sluggish growth statewide: Tennessee employment has grown only 9.8 percent since its low point in February 2010.

Overall, Tennessee employment in the state has increased by 253,000 since its low point in February 2010. The Nashville area, meanwhile, has gained 144,300 jobs since its low point in September 2009.

On the other end of the spectrum, in six metro areas employment has grown at half the national average or less. Those areas, in descending order of growth, are: Memphis, Tennessee; Buffalo, New York; Rochester, New York; Philadelphia; Virginia Beach, Virginia, and St. Louis.

St. Louis has seen the least growth, just 3.3 percent since its low point in December 2009. Missouri as a whole has seen sluggish growth of 4 percent since its low point, which was January 2010.

Next is Virginia Beach, Virginia, with 3.7 percent growth since December 2009, a figure lower than the state’s 5.4 percent growth since February 2010.

Similarly, Philadelphia’s 4.7 percent growth since February 2010 nearly matches Pennsylvania’s employment increase of 4.5 percent over the same time period.

In contrast, Rochester and Buffalo each had about 5 percent job growth since their low points in late 2009. Those rates are below the 8.3 percent employment growth for New York state as a whole during the same period.

Like the states, many of the metro areas share common low points of the Great Recession. Fourteen hit their nadir in February 2010, followed by seven in December 2009.

Detroit was the first metro area to reach its recession low point in June 2009. Employment there has increased 13 percent since.

Sacramento, California, was the last area to reach its low point, in June 2011. Employment there has grown nearly 11 percent since.

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