The first thing to note is that the Council foresees few major structual changes to the overall jobs economy. The most important exception is that clean energy jobs are expected to skyrocket, with more than 50 percent growth predicted between 2000 and 2016. Besides that, growth by industry is expected to be fairly constant, as you can see in this graph.
Comparing the percentage distribution of workers across industries in 2008 vs. 2016 --
that is, comparing the 2008's blue bar to 2016's teal bar -- suggests
that while business and financial services will take the biggest hit,
health and education services are expected to increase by an even
higher percentage. Most other industries percentage of the jobs market is mostly unchanged. Manufacturing, they predict, will fall by less than expected.The graph below projects the industries where we can expect to see the most jobs added. From nursing to physicians to "other medical services," it's quite clear that health care dominates the list.
Leading the pack is a group called "other medical services and
dentists," which the reports counts as home health care, outpatient
care, and medical and diagnostic laboratories subsectors. The report
foresees especially dramatic growth in what it calls the "health
support" industry, with its focus on our aging population. It's also
quite clear from this graph that the Council expects construction to
add millions of jobs with the recession ends and residential and
commercial contracts pick up.But health care is the big story here, and it's merely the continuation of a trend we've been following closely at Atlantic Business. Here's a graph I keep coming back to, from BusinessWeek economist Michael Mandel, that looks at net jobs created and lost over the last ten years in the health/education sector vs. the rest of the economy.
The thing that struck me about the Council's study was how
unsurprising its results were. To me, there are basically three
observations: 1) Health care growth will continue to embrace millions
of jobs; 2) Despite small drops in manufacturing and financial
services, we can expect the job distribution of 2016 to look very much
like 2008; and 3) Construction will come roaring back in the next
decade, down from the doldrums of the housing bubble implosion.








