In the following pages, the Partnership offers its insights into Houston’s economy at mid-year.
Metro Houston added 16,100 jobs in May. Total nonfarm payroll employment now stands at 3,452,600, which is 10,500 jobs over the previous record set in December ’23.
However, the pace of job growth has slowed. The metro area created 81,700 jobs in the 12 months ending May ’24. That compares with 135,000 for the comparable period in ’23. The region benefited from reopening early in the pandemic. After the initial hiring surge, a slowdown in job growth was expected. Recent gains still track above the long-term average of 70,000 jobs per year.
Metro Houston added 38,000 workers to its labor force in the first five months of the year. Over the past 12 months, 86,000 Houstonians have joined the ranks. The surge includes young adults seeking their first job, long-time Houstonians re-entering the labor market, and residents new to the region looking for work. In May, Houston’s labor force stood just shy of 3.7 million workers. The metro area now has a larger workforce than 36 states and the District of Columbia.
Houston saw a brief surge in unemployment earlier in the year, the rate reaching 4.6 percent in February. That reflected a seasonal pattern, the rate always rises 0.5 to 0.8 percentage points as workers hired for the holidays face layoffs in January and February. The rate has since settled to 4.0 percent this May, compared to 4.2 percent in May of last year. Over the past 20 years, the rate has tracked 4.0 percent or lower only 26 months, or less than 11 percent of the time.
Initial claims for unemployment benefits, a proxy for layoffs, have crept up. In January, they averaged 3,500 a week. Late May and early June, they averaged 4,500. Current filings are still below this time last year, when initial claims averaged 5,200 a week, and well below the pandemic peak of 65,000 in late April ’20.
The recent uptick reflects a seasonal pattern. Claims creep up every summer as educators whose contracts have expired file for benefits. This summer’s filings account for 0.12 percent of the region’s 3.7 million workers.
Continued claims filed by workers unemployed for a week or more inched up in May and are 4,300 higher than May ’23. However, continued claims remain well below the peak of 276,000 in July ’20. The recent bump suggests that workers who lose their jobs are experiencing some difficulty, albeit minor, in finding new employment.
To continue reading, download this report.
Note: The geographic area referred to in this publication as “Houston,” "Houston Area” and “Metro Houston” is the ten-county Census designated metropolitan statistical area of Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX. The ten counties are: Austin, Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery, San Jacinto, and Waller.
Review the latest data on inflation in the Houston area.
Review the latest data on jobs in the Houston region.
Review the latest data on this key economic indicator.