A shrinking workforce is hobbling Anchorage's economic recovery, report says

Jan. 27—Anchorage's labor shortage will cost the economy thousands of jobs in high-wage industries like health care this year, according to an economic forecast released Wednesday by the Anchorage Economic Development Corp. It will also hurt the ability of companies to land federal grants from the giant infrastructure package, the forecast says.

The city is expected to add 1,550 jobs in 2023, said Bill Popp, president of the group, presenting the annual report to the city's business community on Wednesday. No sector is expected to lose jobs, keeping the overall workforce at about 145,000 people, he said.

The job expansion is a positive step forward as the economy continues to recover from the pandemic, he said.

But high hopes for more jobs in key sectors have fallen because of the city's long-dwindling workforce, he said.

The economic development corporation last year had anticipated a "wave of job growth" in architecture and engineering jobs, as billions of dollars arrive as part of the $1.2 trillion infrastructure package Congress passed over a year ago, Popp said.

But local employers in those industries and others this year won't be able to take full advantage of the opportunities because of a lack of skilled employees, Popp said.

"The local employers believe they will not be able to hire the necessary skilled workforce, either locally or from out of state, to fill the hundreds of design jobs we believe will be needed for the new infrastructure funding," he said. "Instead, it now appears that most of the new federally funded projects will likely be designed by firms outside of Alaska."

The construction industry will see only modest growth in employment, adding 100 jobs, because of the labor shortage. Construction work for some federal grants will be led by out-of-state firms for that reason, Popp said.

The worker shortage is also the reason the forecast calls for flat growth in the medical industry this year. Strong hiring in health care has driven the state's economic engine for many years, and it has lost only a small number of jobs since 2020, Popp said.

"But this surface view overlooks the thousands of jobs currently going unfilled in the Anchorage health care system," Popp said.

Hospitals, clinics, labs and related businesses are struggling with significant staffing shortages, he said.

[Senior clinic at Alaska Regional to close in February, leaving vulnerable patients with limited options for care]

"And it's not just shortages in nurses, doctors and other positions key to delivery of services to patients," he said. "Thousands of support positions could be filled today including jobs like janitorial, food services, clerical, landscaping, facilities maintenance, and dozens of other positions key to the overall success of our health care system that has taken decades to build up."