Well-known economic forecaster Dr. Loren Scott is attracting headlines with projects that Louisiana could soon surpass the two million jobs threshold in the next two years.

As the Louisiana Radio Network reports, this former chair of the LSU Economics Department points to his forecast of nearly 75,000 job gains in that time frame as the primary engine in achieving the projected job growth.

As Scott explains, the record employment is being driven in large part by the industrial construction boom throughout the state. He says in Shreveport, one thing to watch for is whether a long-rumored project will come to fruition. “What we need to watch for on Shreveport, is whether or not they get a data center. There is a lot of talk, a lot of rumors go around. Everybody signed non-disclosure agreements.”

Also in North Louisiana, Scott points further east, where the city of Monroe is already beginning to feel the early benefits of Meta’s Richland Parish Data Center. “Entergy is building two power plants right next to it. All that construction activity is really going to cause Monroe to boom for the next few years.” Scott is referring to the big announcement in December 2024 by Meta, the parent company of Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram. That announcement is the now highly-publicized 4 million-square-foot campus and the largest data center to date in Meta’s global data center fleet. At peak construction, more than 5,000 workers will be onsite. In Meta’s announcement of the mammoth project, the company revealed that its $10 billion Investment will support more than 500 operational jobs onsite.
According to a report by the Urban Institute, The major industries that contributed the most to Louisiana’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2024 were manufacturing, finance, government, social services (i.e. health and education), and professional services. Manufacturing and social services contributed more to Louisiana’s GDP than they did to the nation’s and region’s GDP, while finance, government, and professional services were less important to Louisiana than they were to the nation and region in 2024.