BRIEFING FOR THE STATE WORKFORCE INVESTMENT BOARD
NEW YORK STATE
APRIL 23, 2001




NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Governor Commissioner

ECONOMIC BACKDROP

DEMOGRAPHIC BACKDROP

The Generations

The Generations
New York State

Generation Born Age in 2001 Number in 1999 Percent of
State's Working
Age Population
(16-64) in 1999
Millennium busters 1996 – present 0 to 5 962,773 0.0
Baby Boom Echo 1980 – 1995 6 to 21 3,962,072 8.1
Baby Bust 1965 to 1979 22 to 36 3,756,870 31.8
Boomers 1946 to 1964 37 to 55 5,253,458 44.5
Pre Boomers Pre-1946 56 and over 4,261,428 15.5

What Happened in the '90s?

Change in Population by Age
York State
1990 to 1999

  Net Percent
Under 16 145,928 3.8%
16-19 -41,293 -4.1%
20-24 -285,136 -20.1%
25-34 525,526 -16.7%
35-44 292,538 10.7%
45-54 525,099 27.5%
55-64 -1,354 -0.1%
16-64 -35,672 -0.3%
Over 64 83,490 3.6%
All Ages 193,746 1.1%

Migration: The Composition of New York's Population is Changing

Population Flows
New York State, 1990-1999

Average Net-In Migration From Other Countries - 120,000
Average Net-Out-Migration To Other States - -204,000

A Look Ahead

BEHAVIORS

The Career Selection Process

TEACHER SHORTAGES

Demand factors

Supply Factors

Significant problems are where and what

Where issues: Challenges facing New York's urban areas

What issues: Shortage varies significantly by teaching fields

Selected Teaching Specialty Percent With Temporary License
English as a Second Language/bilingual education 38.1 percent
Agriculture 22.9 percent
Teaching of the blind & partially sighted 19.0 percent
Teaching of the deaf and hearing impaired 15.4 percent
Speech/hearing handicapped 14.3 percent
Biology 14.1 percent
Languages other than English 13.1 percent
Special education 12.5 percent
Family & consumer science/home economics 10.7 percent
General science/multi-science 10.2 percent
   
   
(data from New York State Department of Education (NYSDoE) website, "Teacher Supply and Demand Data for 1998-99 by New York State Region")

Examples of surplus fields:

Teacher Specialty Percent with Temporary License
Social studies 5.0 percent
English 4.6 percent
Art 4.3 percent
Physical education 3.9 percent
Health 3.0 percent
(data from New York State Department of Education (NYSDoE) website, "Teacher Supply and Demand Data for 1998-99 by New York State Region")

Proposed Remedies

A variety of initiatives have been attempted around the nation to increase the quantity and quality of teachers (Lankford, Wyckoff and Papa, "The Labor Market for Public School Teachers: Descriptive Analysis of New York State's Teacher Workforce," October 25, 2000). Among these:

Health Care Shortage
Demand for nurses will continue to grow as supply continues to contract

Demand Factors

Supply Factors

Impacts of Shortages

Proposed Remedies

High-Tech Worker Shortage

Demand Factors

Supply Factors

Proposed Remedies

High-Tech Occupations Chart