Baltimore Job Market Report
Baltimore’s job market is stable but uneven, with solid growth in health care, logistics, and professional services and more mixed conditions in retail and some blue-collar work. The metro area economy remains diverse, anchored by its port, hospitals, universities, and federal agencies, and supported by commuters from surrounding counties. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson metro unemployment rate has recently hovered around the mid‑3 to low‑4 percent range, roughly in line with the national average, though neighborhood-level unemployment is higher in parts of the city. The labor market features strong employment in education, government, health care, finance, information technology, and hospitality, as reflected by University of Maryland, Baltimore County career outcomes listing education, government, IT, healthcare, finance, and retail among top sectors for local graduates. Major employers include Johns Hopkins Medicine and Johns Hopkins University, the University of Maryland Medical System, city and state government, federal agencies at Fort Meade and Social Security, financial institutions like PNC and T. Rowe Price, and logistics and port-related firms. Growing sectors include cybersecurity and IT tied to federal contracting, health care and life sciences, port and warehouse logistics, and professional and business services; advanced manufacturing and green infrastructure are emerging but smaller. Recent developments include continued investment around the Port of Baltimore, expansion in health campuses, and targeted incentives for tech and biotech corridors, though detailed 2026 project data is fragmented. Seasonal patterns show stronger hiring in summer for tourism, hospitality, and port work, and in late summer and early fall for education; teen summer hiring nationally has softened in some years according to federal jobs data, but local teen-specific data are sparse. Commuting trends remain regionally based, with many workers traveling between Baltimore City, surrounding counties, and Washington‑area job centers; post‑pandemic hybrid work has reduced some downtown office commuting, but comprehensive 2026 mode-share data are limited. Government initiatives focus on workforce development, apprenticeship expansion, and inclusive hiring, especially in tech and trades; specific program outcomes are not yet fully reported. As of now, examples of current openings include a Merchant Services Account Executive in business banking with PNC in the Baltimore area reported by JobLeads, a hybrid ServiceNow Developer position in Baltimore and Rockville listed by Contact Government Services on FlexJobs, and multiple animal care, education, and operations roles at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore reported by ZipRecruiter. Key findings: the Baltimore job market is diversified and moderately tight, with strong health, education, government, and logistics employment; opportunity is growing in tech and cybersecurity but remains uneven across neighborhoods; data gaps persist on neighborhood unemployment, detailed commuting shifts, and some workforce program impacts. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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