World Cup boom falters as US hospitality jobs fall in June
A World Cup jobs boom in the US has failed to materialise, with employment in restaurants, bars and hotels falling in June. Analysts had expected the tournament, being hosted jointly by the US, Canada
A World Cup jobs boom in the US has failed to materialise, with employment in restaurants, bars and hotels falling in June. Analysts had expected the
Read Full Story at BBC Business →Why This Matters
The World Cup was touted as a potential economic catalyst for the U.S. service sector, particularly in hospitality hubs expected to host matches. Instead, the June decline in restaurant, bar, and hotel jobs suggests the tournament’s immediate job-creation impact may be overstated, raising questions about the long-term benefits of hosting mega-events.
Background Context
Past World Cup tournaments have often driven short-term spikes in hospitality employment, but the U.S. job market’s current fragility—amid high interest rates and uneven consumer spending—may have muted the expected surge. Additionally, the tournament’s distributed format across three countries complicates localized job gains, unlike past single-host events.
What Happens Next
July data will reveal whether the dip was a temporary anomaly or part of a broader slowdown in the sector. If employment continues to fall, policymakers may reconsider incentives for mega-events, while businesses could reassess staffing strategies ahead of the tournament’s later stages.
Bigger Picture
The episode underscores the unpredictability of "event economics," where expectations often outpace reality. It also highlights how global mega-events increasingly struggle to deliver promised local economic benefits, particularly in mature markets like the U.S., where labor dynamics are already shifting.

