Mayor Bill de Blasio laid out his six most important priorities at this week's Crain's NYC Summit. One seems to be missing from the list, however, and another got very little emphasis.

The de Blasio agenda, at least as the mayor described it to a business audience, begins with equitable development and is followed by improving education, investing in infrastructure and transportation, dealing with climate change, making the city even safer while improving police-community relations, and making New York inclusive in the broadest possible way.

What’s missing? Every mayor I have covered from Ed Koch to Mike Bloomberg would have put jobs in a prominent place on the list.

Of course, the economy is booming and de Blasio noted strong employment growth while he has been mayor (some 350,000 jobs). He also made a compelling case that the city must continue to grow and build, including a plea for more density and height. But no jobs plan?

The mayor also hardly mentioned inequality—his signature issue dating back to his 2013 campaign. He could have taken credit for implementing virtually every step he promised to reduce inequality in the city—pre-K for all, paid sick leave, higher and broader living-wage rules for companies doing business with the city, a much higher minimum wage (after his plan was co-opted by Gov. Andrew Cuomo) and the most ambitious affordable housing plan in the city’s history.

The mayor’s problem is that while inequality hasn’t gotten worse, it hasn’t gotten any better. The reason may be that the programs will take some time to work (true) and that a mayor can’t really affect inequality very much (also true). Nevertheless, this week’s speech was a sign that voters won’t hear much about the issue in the 2017 mayoral campaign, which begins next week.