Stockton University's beachfront campus in Atlantic City.
ATLANTIC CITY - The momentum Atlantic City's economy built up last year as it continued to recover from the COVID-19 recession of 2020, has carried into this year, according to the Summer 2023 edition of Stockton's South Jersey Economic Review, which was released today.
Employment data through the first quarter of the year shows the Atlantic City metropolitan area economy expanded at a brisk 4.8% year-on-year pace.
Importantly, this year's early job gains have been broad-based with retail trade, casino hotels, restaurants and bars, professional and business services, and health and educational services all recording solid year-on-year job gains, said Oliver Cooke, editor of the Review and associate professor of Economics at Stockton.
In addition to surveying the regional economy's current economic conditions, the newest edition of the Review analyzes the recovery of the South Jersey regional and state economies from the 2020 COVID-19 recession during the past two years.
Reflecting reliance upon the leisure and hospitality sector, the Atlantic City and Ocean City metropolitan areas were among just 19 U.S. metropolitan areas that lost at least 10% of their jobs during the 2020 COVID-19 recession. Both metro area economies have seen steady recoveries over the past two years. Ocean City's jobs recovery ranks as the second best among those 19 hard-hit metropolitan areas, while Atlantic City's ranks as the seventh best.
Given where it stood during the summer and fall of 2020, the regional economy's recovery in 2021 and 2022 has been fairly impressive and underscores its resilience, Cooke said in a release.
The Review also highlights the overall strength of the state economy's recovery during the past two years. New Jersey's job loss in 2020 was the eighth largest in the U.S., yet its jobs recovery among the 20 states hardest hit by COVID ranks as the third best.
Other highlights of the Review include: