『Portland's Healthcare Boom: Stable Jobs Amid National Slowdown』のカバーアート

Portland's Healthcare Boom: Stable Jobs Amid National Slowdown

Portland's Healthcare Boom: Stable Jobs Amid National Slowdown

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Portland's job market shows modest recovery amid national slowdowns, with Oregon's overall employment flat in 2025 but propped up by healthcare, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The employment landscape features stable demand in health services, while office vacancy rates downtown fell for the first time in three years, absorbing nearly 330,000 square feet per Kidder Mathews' latest quarterly report. Key statistics include Oregon's 322,000 private sector healthcare workers by late 2025, representing 16% of jobs, up from 9% at the century's start. Unemployment specifics for Portland are limited in recent data, though national youth rates for ages 20-24 stood at 6.4% in March per Bureau of Labor Statistics, above the U.S. 4.3% average; Oregon trends mirror national flatness with healthcare driving nearly all 2025 gains.

Major industries encompass healthcare, employing one in seven workers statewide, alongside tech, manufacturing, and government. Leading employers include Providence Health, Nike, and Intel, though specifics for 2026 remain sparse. Growing sectors highlight healthcare roles like nurse practitioners and medical managers, with seven of Oregon's 15 fastest-growing jobs in this field per the Oregon Employment Department; projections to 2033 foresee shortages, needing 88% of required nurses and under two-thirds for surgeons and mental health counselors. Trends indicate healthcare expansion twice the state's pace this century, offsetting private sector cuts elsewhere.

Recent developments note slowed deal volume but positive office absorption, per Kidder Mathews. Seasonal patterns lack Portland-specific data, though tourism dipped with 21% fewer international arrivals at Portland International Airport in 2025 versus 2024, per U.S. Customs and Border Protection, hitting hospitality. Commuting trends show no clear shifts, with data gaps here. Government initiatives are unmentioned in sources.

Market evolution points to healthcare dominance amid aging demographics, contrasting wobbly national growth like March's disputed 178,000 jobs per U.S. reports.

Key findings: Healthcare fuels stability, but shortages loom; office markets improve modestly. Current openings include Finance Intern Summer 2026 at McKesson, various office roles paying $42k-$150k via ZipRecruiter in Portland.

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