EE MS student here. Electrical engineering is an extremely broad field. Areas of specialization and the prerequisite knowledge for those fields include include control systems (differential equations and probability), RF (vector Calc), power (not sure), embedded programming (C) or circuit design (diffeq and digital logic). You will also learn higher level programming languages like python and Matlab. So one specialization might be growing while one is shrinking. I don't really have jobs data on these subfields, but I know IEEE releases a paid report (jobs survey) which does.
With every engineering field, there are more graduates than entry level jobs, which means that every electrical engineer cannot go directly into what the BLS traditionally considers "electrical engineering." Electrical engineering has about 2 graduates per entry level job, which fares better than ME for example which has 5.
However, you will likely not have issues finding a job. This is because there are many jobs EEs are qualified for that aren't counted as "electrical engineering" by BLS. I am interning as a data scientist. Two of my friends are doing software engineering. One is working at a quant firm in NYC. There are about 2 computer science graduates for every entry level CS position, so a lot of EEs go into that, since it does pay better than EE. And if you just want an EE job, you will probably always be able to find work at a defense contractor as long as you don't do drugs/have debt/are a US citizen.
I am not really interested in traditional electrical engineering topics but I gained so many in demand transferable skills in math/statistics/programming during my bachelor's that I decided to get my masters in it. It is a challenging major, but rewarding.