Household economic resilience in metropolitan New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina

Stacey Roussel (Invest in Louisiana) Christina LeBlanc (Invest in Louisiana)

Published: Jun 24, 2026

Overview

The Greater New Orleans region is widely recognized as a cultural and economic driver for Louisiana, yet too many of its residents do not share in this prosperity—leaving the region and its people vulnerable to economic shocks. Twenty years after Hurricane Katrina and the failure of the federal levees, many investments have been made in state and regional economic development, but the recovery has been uneven. Economic opportunity and outcomes vary greatly by race, age, gender, and ZIP code.

In the two decades since Hurricane Katrina, Greater New Orleans has embarked on a complex and uneven path toward economic recovery. Billions of dollars in federal aid, philanthropic investment, and public-private partnerships have helped rebuild the regionʼs infrastructure and maintain its brand as a cultural and economic destination. Yet for the workers who form the backbone of this economy, the story is more complicated. From the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010, to the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 to 2023, to Hurricane Ida in 2021, residents have weathered repeated economic shocks—each one revealing and exacerbating long-standing structural weaknesses in the New Orleans metropolitan region’s labor market. While New Orleans is globally known for its resilience, many of its workers remain vulnerable to financial instability, low wages, and limited access to opportunity.

This report reviews the progress and investments made after Hurricane Katrina as measured by indicators of household economic resilience—such as the mix of regional jobs and industries, wages and benefits, labor force participation, and unemployment—to surface both successes and areas for future growth and improvement. The report highlights both progress and persistent challenges, including the regionʼs dependence on lower-wage clusters, its racial and gender wage gaps, and an erosion of some higher-wage opportunities. The report also examines the role of state and local policies such as preemption laws and tax structures, and how these frameworks shape local government capacity and worker outcomes.

Despite periods of economic expansion, the region has yet to fully recover the number of jobs lost since Hurricane Katrina, and it offers limited pathways to economic mobility. At the same time, Louisianaʼs regressive tax system, shrinking public sector workforce, and state preemption laws constrain local governmentsʼ ability to pursue policies that would strengthen economic resilience for working families. Still, progress has been made in areas such as local funding for quality affordable early care and education, improvement in the availability of some workplace benefits, and job recovery in some growing industry clusters.

Strengthening New Orleaniansʼ household economic security and promoting strong public policies will lead to a more resilient and sustainable region. Without sufficient earnings, benefits, or savings, many households remain one emergency away from financial crisis and erosion of wealth.1 Research shows that many households in the region struggle to cover even modest emergency expenses, highlighting the importance of building a stronger financial safety net before the next crisis occurs.2

Resilience at the regional level depends on the stability of individual households, requiring jobs with sustainable wages and benefits, access to affordable education and training, and a strong public safety net. A thriving New Orleans economy must be one where all workers have a fair shot at stability, mobility, and shared prosperity. Resilience must go beyond recovery to encompass greater opportunity for the people who live and work in the region. A resilient regional economy is one in which households can withstand and recover from disruptions and where communities can adapt to future challenges with equity and sustainability at the center.

This report aims to center that vision by evaluating the past and charting a path forward that prioritizes workers and household economic security as key to the regionʼs resilience and prosperity and then offering several policy recommendations.

Continue reading the full report [Download PDF]

Citations and sources can be found in the PDF copy of the report.

Endnotes

1 Paavani Sachdeva, Yilan Xu, and Amy Ando, “Household Finance in the Aftermath of Floods and Wildfires,” February 7, 2024, https:// papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4720007.

2 Stephanie Hoopes, “The State of ALICE in Louisiana: 2025 Update on Financial Hardship,” United Way, May 2025, https:// www.unitedforalice.org/the-cost-of-basics/louisiana.