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Health Care Remains Top Michigan Job Provider, Despite Slight Decline During Pandemic

Health care remained a top employer and economic force in Michigan as of two years ago, despite a small decline in the number of jobs from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, which also worked to drive up wages.

Crain’s Detroit Business
March Sanchez
May 8, 2023

Health care remained a top employer and economic force in Michigan as of two years ago, despite a small decline in the number of jobs from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, which also worked to drive up wages.

The industry in 2021 directly employed nearly 568,000 people in Michigan who were paid nearly $46 billion in wages and salaries, according to annual data from a trio of health care organizations.

Health care indirectly supported another 470,000 positions that paid $27.7 billion, lifting the industry’s overall economic effects in Michigan to 1.03 million jobs and $73.6 billion in wages and salaries.

That equates to nearly one in five jobs in Michigan tied directly or indirectly to health care as of 2021.

Of the people that the industry directly employed, 219,000 worked at hospitals, according to the data from the Michigan Health & Hospital Association, Michigan State Medical Society, and Michigan Osteopathic Association.

“Hospitals and health care continued to be a critical part of the economic vibrancy of the state in addition to the work we do taking care of people,” said MHA Chief Executive Officer Brian Peters.

The MHA teams with the Medical Society and the Osteopathic Association to issue the annual economic impact report that takes into account positions at hospitals, nursing homes, physician practices, and other settings. The data for direct jobs includes clinical, administrative, and support positions in health care.

The report’s 2023 version noted a decline of about 4,000 direct jobs as hospitals and other care providers cut positions in response to tightening finances in the pandemic and as workers, particularly nurses, left their jobs. Citing concerns over stress levels, some caregivers left their jobs to go into other sectors or settings or opted to retire early.

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