

The US has faced two major economic calamities this century, the Great Recession and Covid-19. In both cases, huge numbers of people lost their jobs. During the Great Recession the number of employed Americans fell by 9 million and almost 11 million fewer people had jobs in September 2020 than in February.
But jobs in all industries were not hit equally hard. In fact, there were a few industries where jobs actually expanded during both recessions, according to Quartz’s analysis of data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Two of these recession-proof industries are:
In contrast, travel-industry jobs were hit incredibly hard in both recessions, as businesses cut costs, consumers cut back on luxuries, and people stayed home.
Federal government workers did well during both recessions. The federal government’s workforce expanded by about 10% in both recessions, though most of those gains during Covid-19 were a result of temporary hiring for the decennial US Census. Excluding that hiring, the number of federal government jobs remained about the same.
(To learn more about specific industries, click on a link at this BLS website.)
Some recession-resilient industries don’t pay well. Others do: