Pioneer Report Highlights Pre-Pandemic Employment Growth in Massachusetts’ Hospitality & Food Industry

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on
LinkedIn
+

BOSTON – In the lead-up to the COVID-19 crisis, the Massachusetts Hospitality and Food Industry enjoyed generally positive employment growth, according to a new report from Pioneer Institute that draws data from the MassEconomix web tool. Most of the Hospitality and Food Industry employment across the state is concentrated in full-service restaurants and hotels.

“Unsurprisingly, the predominant industry employers in 2018 were large, casual chains like Dunkin’ Donuts, McDonald’s, and Starbucks,” said Pioneer Research Assistant Andrew Mikula, who co-authored the report with Serena Hajjar. “That said, most individual establishments in the industry have fewer than 10 employees, and are a vital economic component of the communities they serve.”

In “Before COVID-19, the Hospitality & Food Industry was a Service Sector Economic Powerhouse,” data spanning two decades from 1998 through 2018 show fluctuations in employment, firm size, and the share of businesses within the Hospitality and Food Industry throughout Massachusetts. The report even shows a map of employment concentration in the Hospitality and Food Industry by town.

The concentration of Hospitality and Food Industry establishments is uneven. While tourist enclaves like Cape Cod and the Berkshires are noticeably more reliant on restaurants and hotels for economic activity than most of Massachusetts, 13 rural communities in Western Massachusetts have no businesses in this industry at all. On the county level, Nantucket has the most Hospitality and Food businesses per capita, while Worcester County has the fewest.

Although the total number of both employees and business establishments in the industry has steadily increased from 1998 to 2018, shutdowns associated with the COVID-19 pandemic have the potential to radically alter these trends.

“The Hospitality and Food Industry has been front and center in the COVID-19 economic fallout, and this report offers key insights about which regions and sub-sectors will continue to be most adversely affected,” said Mikula.

All the reports in Pioneer’s MassEconomix series use the same Your-economy Time Series data to develop aggregated numbers for statewide growth. These data are recorded by Infogroup and compiled by the Business Dynamics Research Consortium (BDRC) at the University of Wisconsin System Institute for Business and Entrepreneurship in Madison, Wisconsin.

The report is the second in a series that presents employment and business establishment trends in the Commonwealth’s industries, using Your-economy Time Series data to release regular publications that create “snapshots” of particular industries and geographies.

About the Authors

Andrew Mikula is a Research Assistant at Pioneer Institute. Mr. Mikula was pre­viously a Lovett & Ruth Peters Economic Opportunity Fellow at Pioneer Institute and studied economics at Bates College.

Serena Hajjar is the Roger Perry Government Transparency Intern at the Pioneer Institute, focusing on the effects of the coronavirus response on the state economy, emerging industries, and tax structures. Ms. Hajjar is a recipient of the Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Grant to Russia for the 2020-21 cycle. She has a B.A. in international relations and Russian and Eastern European studies from the University of Pennsylvania.

About Pioneer

Mission
Pioneer Institute develops and communicates dynamic ideas that advance prosperity and a vibrant civic life in Massachusetts and beyond.

Vision
Success for Pioneer is when the citizens of our state and nation prosper and our society thrives because we enjoy world-class options in education, healthcare, transportation and economic opportunity, and when our government is limited, accountable and transparent.

Values
Pioneer believes that America is at its best when our citizenry is well-educated, committed to liberty, personal responsibility, and free enterprise, and both willing and able to test their beliefs based on facts and the free exchange of ideas.

Get Updates on Our Economic Opportunity Research

Related Posts:

Heading Down: The Loss of Massachusetts Headquarters

/
The Loss of Massachusetts Headquarters Author(s): John Friar…

Creating Jobs: Reforming Unemployment Insurance in Massachusetts

/
Author(s): Steve Poftak — Publication date: 2011-02-10 Category:…

This is dumb smart growth

/
While Pioneer has done quite a lot of work on water pricing and…

234 and counting

/
The piece Alan Wirzbicki did in today's Globe has pushed comments…

Driving the New Urban Agenda: Desired Outcomes for the Middle Cities Initiative

/
Desired Outcomes for the Middle Cities Initiative Author(s):…

Erroll Tyler and the IJ lawsuit

/
Kudos to the Globe editorial page and to the Boston Herald for…

Additional Reforms for the Governor’s Accelerated Bridge Repair Proposal

/
Author(s): Steve Poftak — Publication date: 2008-06-01 Category:…

Learning From Springfield: Lessons in Effective Fiscal Management

/
Lessons in Effective Fiscal Management Author(s): Steve Poftak…

Floor falls out in California housing

/
On the LA Times blog today there is a distressing bit of news…

Fed corporate tax killing state competitiveness

/
One could sum up a report from the Tax Foundation as saying the…

Counterintuitive Healthcare Cost Data

/
It has been the conventional wisdom that small businesses are…

So, which is it?

/
Our friends at CURP and A Better City held an event on Oct. 31st…

Debating biotech on NECN

/
Some improvements in the House version of the biotech bill resulted…

One down, two to go

/
Just a few months ago, a wise man said the proof of success in…

Nice job by Regional Planning Agencies

/
Kudos to the state's planning agencies for coming together to…

Two connections are missing

/
In a number of articles in the Boston press on the Governor's…

The Dome does not get it

/
But Steve Bailey does. Not because he mentions Pioneer's work…

Chinatown bus

/
I know there have been, let's call it, some issues with the Chinatown…