Index Methodology<\/li>\nEditor's note: Below you'll find the week 64 release of the NYC Recovery Index, originally published November 9, 2021. Visit the NYC Recovery index homepage for the latest data.<\/em><\/p>\nNew York City\u2019s economic recovery index broke its record-setting streak, falling just over six points to a score of 78 as of Oct. 30, after three straight weeks of fresh highs above 80. Setbacks in the city\u2019s home sales, unemployment claims, and restaurant reservations were primarily responsible for the decline.<\/p>\n
To help the tourism industry, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced a $450 million spending package on Monday called “Bring Back Tourism, Bring Back Jobs.” The package includes one-time grants for laid-off workers and their employers, who were some of the hardest hit during the pandemic. The state would issue one-time payments of $2,750 to tourism industry workers who lost their jobs because of the pandemic, and provide $5,000 grants to tourism companies to rehire workers and employ them for at least six months.<\/p>\n
New York City\u2019s recovery stands at a score of 78 out of 100, according to the New York City Recovery Index, a joint project between Investopedia and NY1. Over a year and a half into the pandemic, NYC\u2019s economic recovery is a little under four-fifths of the way back to early March 2020 levels.<\/p>\n
COVID-19 Hospitalizations Contract <\/span> <\/h2>\nCOVID-19 hospitalization rates continued to decline as of Oct. 30, falling to a rolling seven-day average of 32 hospitalizations per 100,000 people, six fewer than the week before. While an improvement from highs reached at the beginning of the year in January, that rate is still 60% higher than hospitalization rates at the end of June.<\/p>\n
The CDC continues to project that roughly 99.1% of new cases in the New York region (along with New Jersey, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands) are linked to the delta variant. A total of 1,129,147 cases and 34,634 deaths were recorded in New York City as of Nov. 9.<\/span><\/p>\nAs of Nov. 8, New York State has fully vaccinated approximately 67.76% of its broader population and is on pace to fully vaccinate 70% by late January of next year. In a national ranking of state vaccination efforts, New York State came in 8th out of 50 states, districts, and territories, according to CDC data and analysis by Verywell.<\/p>\n
Unemployment Claims Rise <\/span> <\/h2>\nThe city\u2019s rate of unemployment claims experienced some setbacks as of Oct. 30, as claims rose 12 percentage points to an estimated 50% above pre-pandemic levels. After several weeks of steady progress, the relapse represents the first increase in five weeks, and could signal renewed volatility in the measure. With a surge in seasonal hiring for the holidays anticipated soon, seasonal work could impact claims in the coming weeks.<\/p>\n
Home Sales Plummet <\/span> <\/h2>\nThe number of pending home sales in New York City tumbled by 34 homes as of Oct. 30 compared to a jump over the same period in 2019, which dragged the city\u2019s home sales index down by 29 points. However, sales in the city are still over 54% above pre-pandemic levels, with 645 homes pending sales over the week compared to 418 in 2019. By borough, sales in Manhattan are up 56.5% compared to pre-pandemic levels, while sales figures in Queens are up 80% and Brooklyn is up 35.7%.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Rental Market Squeezed by Low Inventory <\/span> <\/h2>\nA decrease of 919 available residences weighed on New York City\u2019s rental market, causing the index to fall three points to a score of 82 due to lack of units. There were a total of 14,655 residences on the market compared to 15,574 the week before. Though its score continues to hover in the low 80s, the rental market continues to be one of the best-performing measures in the index, and has effectively recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic.<\/p>\n
Subway Ridership Unchanged <\/span> <\/h2>\nSubway ridership made some slight progress as of Oct. 30, but not enough to move its score, and remains near 43% below pre-pandemic levels. The measure has yet to break free of its sustained lull near the 50% mark, where it has lingered over several months. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) estimated a trailing seven-day average of close to 2.8 million riders on public transport.\u00a0<\/p>\n