Topeka Employment Forecast

Released May 3, 2021 (See previous version)

The Topeka metropolitan area’s[1] employment contracted by 3.9 percent in 2020, a decline of more than 4,300 workers.  The most significant loss was in the second quarter, due to the novel coronavirus outbreak when employment declined by 8,000 workers.  Employment grew in the third quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021, regaining more than 4,000 of those jobs lost in the second quarter, but remaining almost 4,000 jobs below the area’s pre-pandemic employment peak.  The unemployment rate rose sharply in the second quarter, increasing more than nine percentage points to a peak of 12.4 percent in April 2020.  By March 2021, the unemployment rate declined to 3.5 percent.

Topeka’s recovery is forecast to continue in 2021, with employment in the fourth quarter of 2021 projected to be 1.8 percent higher than employment in the fourth quarter of 2020.   The area is projected to recover more than 5,200 of the 8,000 jobs lost in the second quarter of 2020 by the end of the fourth quarter of 2021.  Downside risks and uncertainty remain accentuated during the recovery period, such as supply chain disruptions and further lockdowns and social distancing brought on by mutations of the novel coronavirus.

    • Production sector employment is expected to increase 2.5 percent from the fourth quarter of 2020 to the fourth quarter of 2021. The manufacturing sector is forecast to add more than 200 jobs, expanding 2.6 percent, while the construction sector is projected to add more than 100 jobs, growing 2.3 percent.
    • Employment in the trade, transportation, and utilities sector is forecast to grow 1.1 percent from the fourth quarter of 2020 to the fourth quarter of 2021. The retail trade sector is projected to grow the fastest, at 1.9 percent, and by fewer than 100 jobs below its pre-pandemic peak by the fourth quarter of 2021.  The transportation and utilities sector is expected to grow by 0.6 percent throughout 2021.
    • Service sector employment is projected to grow 1.5 percent from the fourth quarter of 2020 to the fourth quarter of 2021, adding approximately 800 jobs to the local economy. The leisure and hospitality sector is forecast to have the fastest growth among Topeka’s area’s service sectors in 2021, expanding more than 9.3 percent by the fourth quarter, following a contraction of 28.5 percent in the second quarter of 2020.  The health care sector is projected to increase by 1.2 percent, recovering almost all of the jobs it lost in the pandemic recession.
    • Topeka’s government sector is expected to expand 2.3 percent from the fourth quarter of 2020 to the fourth quarter of 2021. The local government sector is projected to be the fastest-growing government sector, adding more than 400 new jobs and growing 3 percent.

     

    [1] The Topeka metropolitan area consists of Jackson, Jefferson, Osage, Shawnee, and Wabaunsee counties in Kansas.


      
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Topeka Employment by Industry Summary*
  2019 (a) 2020 (e) 2021 (f) 2020-2021 Level Change 2020-2021 Percent Change
Total Nonfarm 111,496 107,141 108,366 1,225 1.10%
Production Sectors 13,482 13,302 13,790 488 3.70%
Trade, Transportation & Utilities 16,692 16,723 17,350 627 3.80%
Service Sectors 54,379 51,138 51,886 748 1.50%
Government 26,944 25,978 25,340 -638 -2.50%
*Annual values are derived from average quarterly observations and projections. 
(a) actual (e) estimated (f) forecasted
Source: CEDBR, BLS - CES

 

Topeka Employment by Industry Summary*
  2020Q4 (a) 2021Q1 (e) 2021Q2 (f) 2021Q3 (f) 2021Q4 (f)
Total Nonfarm 106,752 107,596 108,511 108,725 108,631
Production Sectors 13,474 13,713 13,812 13,830 13,806
Trade, Transportation & Utilities 17,028 17,394 17,412 17,373 17,221
Service Sectors 51,124 51,543 51,982 52,107 51,911
Government 25,125 24,945 25,306 25,415 25,693
*Annual values are derived from average quarterly observations and projections. 
(a) actual (e) estimated (f) forecasted
Source: CEDBR, BLS - CES
 
 

 

 

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