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Around the South
QUIZ
In calendar years' 2001-2003 the U.S. lost nearly 2 million
net jobs, or about 1.5 percent of the total non-farm employment
in the country. How many of those 2 million net lost jobs
came from the South. (a) 1.2 million (b) none (c) 212,000
(d) 467,219.
(Scroll down for answer)
Bidding Begins for FTAA Headquarters
Atlanta and Miami have both set their sites on landing the
Free Trade Area of the Americas' headquarters. The two southern
cities are about 650 miles apart, but Miami is considered
the U.S. front-runner because of its trade relationships with
Latin America and the Caribbean. Nine other cities are also
competing for the headquarters that would bring 11,000 new
jobs to the city of choice over a 10-year period.
Citgo Relocating HQ to Houston from Tulsa
Citgo Petroleum announced in May it will move its headquarters
from Tulsa to Houston. Citgo will relocate 700 workers to
Houston, leaving 300 in Tulsa. The oil and gas producer also
announced it will add 150 new jobs at its Corpus Christi facilities
and invest more than $800 million there over the next 10 years.
Infineon Invests $1 Billion in Richmond
The move for chipmakers to 300mm wafers is paying off for
the Richmond, Va. area. Infineon Technologies is investing
$1 billion and adding about 1,000 new workers at its Virginia
chip plant. The expansion will enable the plant to produce
advanced DRAM chips on 300mm wafers. Production is expected
to begin early in 2005.
South's Semiconductor Industry Expanding
In the mid-1990s almost every state in the South courted
the semiconductor industry like no other industry. Millions
were spent marketing sites for what was believed to be a significant
number of new semiconductor startups throughout the region.
Two were announced in Virginia in the mid-'90s, yet only one
was built there. Texas saw a handful of expansions of existing
chip plants. But the expected semiconductor boon of the mid-1990s
was a bust.
Last year (calendar year 2003) saw three large semiconductor
deals in the South with Texas Instruments, Sematech and Samsung.
All of those deals occurred in the state of Texas. The Texas
Instruments deal is the first new semiconductor plant to be
built in the South in almost eight years.
Infineon Technologies is the latest wafer maker to expand
in the South. Infineon announced in April it is expanding
its Henrico County (Richmond) semiconductor facility in order
to produce 300-mm wafers. The company is investing over $1
billion (that's with a "b") in the deal, which will
create another 1,200 new jobs to the 1,700 already working
at the plant.
Great Start for Mississippi
The first quarter of 2004 saw companies invest over $476
million in new and expanded projects in the state of Mississippi.
Significant announcements in the Magnolia State in the first
quarter included those made by FedEx, and auto suppliers'
Textron Fastening Systems and Faurecia.
Disney World to Add 2,000 Workers for Summer Season
The South's tourism industry got a boost in May when Disney
officials announced they would hire about 2,000 additional
workers for the summer season at the Disney World theme park
and resort near Orlando. Disney employs nearly 55,000 people
in Central Florida.
KPMG Ranks Cost of Doing Business
A KPMG study of 24 U.S. cities with a population of more
than 1.5 million reveals Atlanta and Tampa are the two large
cities in the South with the lowest cost of doing business.
Only Puerto Rico's costs were lower. St. Louis ranked eighth
and Houston ranked 18th on the least expensive list while
San Jose and New York ranked the most expensive. KPMG's "Competitive
Alternatives" study measures 27 location-sensitive business
operating costs for 12 specific types of business over a 10-year
span. In a similar study of mid-sized markets, Greenville-Spartanburg,
S.C. is the least costly city among 11 locations surveyed,
Nashville ranked second lowest and Hartford, Conn. was the
most expensive place to do business among midsized U.S. cities
studied.
Competitive Alternatives Study
(U.S. Cities with population of more than 1.5 million - Bold
are Southern Markets)
| City |
Cost Index |
Rank |
| San Juan, Puerto Rico |
93.0 |
1 |
| Atlanta |
99.2 |
2 |
| Tampa |
99.3 |
3 |
| Phoenix |
99.4 |
4 |
| Indianapolis |
99.6 |
5 |
| Columbus, OH |
99.9 |
6 |
| Northern Virginia (Metro DC) |
101.3 |
7 |
| St. Louis |
102.0 |
8 |
| Milwaukee |
102.1 |
9 (tie) |
| Philadelphia |
102.1 |
9 (tie) |
| Las Vegas |
102.2 |
11 |
| Portland |
102.5 |
12 |
| Dallas-Ft. Worth |
102.8 |
13 |
| Chicago |
103.5 |
14 |
| Boston |
103.8 |
15 |
| Minneapolis |
104.1 |
16 |
| Newark |
104.3 |
17 |
| Houston |
104.7 |
18 |
| Riverside-San Bernardino |
104.8 |
19 |
| San Diego |
105.1 |
20 |
| Seattle |
105.6 |
21 (tie) |
| Detroit |
105.6 |
21 (tie) |
| New York City |
109.8 |
23 |
| San Jose |
110.9 |
24 |
Cost index figures were created by measuring the combined
impact of 27 cost components that are most likely to vary
by location. More than 1,000 individual business scenarios
were examined, analyzing more than 30,000 items of data. For
comparison purposes, the national average was assigned a cost
index of 100.0.
Biotech Bill Passes in Georgia
The Georgia Senate has passed a bill to increase the amount
of state seed money a life sciences company can receive to
$1 million. The bill modifies a statute passed by a voter
referendum in 1989. The transactions must be authorized by
the state-funded Advanced Technology Development Center at
Georgia Tech. For a loan to be approved, every state dollar
loaned must be matched by $3 from the private sector.
Atlanta Leads U.S. in Single-Family Housing
For the 13th year in a row, the Greater Atlanta metro area
led the nation in housing activity, with 53,750 single-family
home permits last year, according to the Greater Atlanta Home
Builders Association. Rounding out the top five housing markets
for single-family permits were the metropolitan areas of Phoenix-Mesa,
Ariz. with 46,590; Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif. with 35,730;
Houston with 33,970; and Washington, D.C. with 30,760.
Atlanta Top U-Haul Movers' Destination
Atlanta maintained its No. 1 position in U-Haul's annual
2003 national migration trend report as the city with the
most movers arriving for the fourth year in a row. Among cities
with more than 10,000 families moving, Miami had the highest
percentage of growth, with 7.5 percent more families moving
into the area than out. Dallas ranked second behind Atlanta.
Houston ranked third, and Chicago and New York came in fourth
and fifth respectively.
Kentucky Unveils Tax-Reform Program
Kentucky Gov. Ernie Fletcher has unveiled a tax-reform plan
that would repeal the corporate license tax, rendering moot
the so-called double tax on Kentucky-based companies that
resulted from the decision in the Illinois Tool Works Case.
The reform would also reduce the maximum corporate income
tax rate to 6 percent from 8.5 percent and create a tax-incentive
program to improve the Enterprise Zone program that will expire
in a few years. The program would also broaden the corporate
tax base to include limited liability entities.
BASF Eyes Baton Rouge
Agra-giant BASF is eyeing Baton Rouge as a possible location
for a storage facility at its nearby Geismar site. The decision
is pending as the company conducts a study to determine if
liquid storage tanks and a logistics center at the Geismar
site would reduce costs and enhance environmental performance.
Study Identifies Hottest Job Markets
Business 2.0 magazine recently unveiled the 20 hottest job
markets in America. According to a March 2004 article, the
cities on the list are estimated to generate 850,000 skilled
jobs in the next four years.
The magazine's "boom town" ranking is the first
of its kind to measure cities by their capacity to create
high-wage jobs. The rankings were formulated in collaboration
with econometric research firm Global Insight.
The following are the top 20 boomtowns in America, according
to Business 2.0 (Southern markets are bold)
1. Raleigh-Durham, NC
2. San Jose, CA
3. Washington, DC
4. Austin, TX
5. Atlanta, GA
6. West Palm Beach, FL
7. San Francisco-Oakland, CA
8. Middlesex-Somerset, NJ
9. Seattle, WA
10. Boston, MA
11. Sacramento, CA
12. Phoenix, AZ
13. Minneapolis, MN
14. Denver, CO
15. New Haven-Stamford, CT
16. Baltimore, MD
17. San Diego, CA
18. Dallas, TX
19. Charlotte, NC
20. Philadelphia, PA
To create the ratings, 61 metropolitan areas with populations
over 1 million were ranked using a weighted formula that includes
forecast growth rates in sectors that contain the economy's
10 most skilled occupational clusters, the prevalence of college
degrees in the local workforce, and median salary. Close attention
was also paid to the percentage of the labor force made up
of highly skilled and educated creative-class workers.
Steel Dynamics Scouting for Southern Sites
Indiana-based steel maker Steel Dynamics is scouting manufacturing
sites in several southeastern states. The company's New Millennium
Building Systems division is undergoing site selection discussions
for a new joist and deck fabrication plant that would create
about 200 jobs. Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina,
and North Carolina are in the running.
TVA Launches Supersite Program
The Tennessee Valley Authority has launched an effort to
identify large industrial sites in its territories in the
South that can accommodate automotive assembly plants and
other users of properties of more than 700 acres. Local economic
development agencies in TVA service areas are submitting potential
sites to the federal power provider. Each megasite will be
analyzed in an effort to certify it for use by automotive
plants that are sure to announce in the near and far future
in the Southern Auto Corridor.
AirTran Opens Pilot Training Center in Atlanta
AirTran recently held the grand opening of its new pilot
training center in Atlanta. The facility will be the location
of both recurrent and new hire training for the airline's
850 pilots.
Only Two Southern Markets Make Longest Commute List
New York City residents spend an average of about one full
week a year getting to work - the longest commute time in
the nation among large cities, according to a new ranking
of American Community Survey data released by the U.S. Census
Bureau. New York City residents take an average of 38.4 minutes
to get to work each day - more than five minutes longer than
Chicagoans, who face a commute of 32.7 minutes.
Other large cities with populations of 250,000 or more with
long commutes include Philadelphia (30.3 minutes), Riverside,
Calif. (29.8), Baltimore (29.7), Washington, D.C. (29.4),
San Francisco (29.2), Oakland, Calif. (29.1), Los Angeles
(28.5) and Boston (28.2).
Florida Has Abundance of Workers
Florida's growing population means that the state could support
more jobs, according to recently released analysis of job
creation data from the Washington, D.C.-based Economic Policy
Institute and the Florida International University Center
for Labor Research and Studies. If job growth in the state
had kept up with population growth, Florida would have gained
221,200 more jobs during the period since March 2001.
Eastern States Lead in Graduate Degrees
States with some of the highest concentrations of graduate
and professional degree holders tend to be located along the
East Coast, according to a new analysis of American Community
Survey (ACS) data released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.
The 2002 ACS survey, which looked at graduate-degree attainment
for the 25-and-over population, found some of the highest
levels of graduate and professional degrees in Massachusetts
(14.5 percent), Maryland (14.1 percent), Connecticut (13.7
percent), Virginia (12.9 percent), New York (12.6 percent)
and Vermont (12.3 percent). West of the Mississippi River,
Colorado and New Mexico stood out with graduate degree rates
of 11.5 percent and 11.0 percent, respectively. Graduate and
professional degrees include master's, law, medical and doctorate
degrees.
Among cities with populations of 250,000 or more, high rates
of graduate degree attainment were found in Seattle (19.3
percent), San Francisco (18.5 percent), Atlanta (17.2 percent),
Albuquerque, N.M. (16.6 percent), Boston (16.4 percent) and
Austin, Texas (16.3 percent).
Of the 231 counties with populations of 250,000 or more in
the survey, counties neighboring East Coast cities ranked
among the highest in graduate degrees. These included counties
in the following metropolitan areas: Washington, D.C. - Montgomery
and Howard counties in Maryland (29.2 percent and 24.7 percent,
respectively) and Fairfax County, Va. (28.1 percent); New
York - New York County (25.7 percent), Westchester County,
N.Y. (23.5 percent); and Boston - Middlesex County (21.2 percent)
and Norfolk County (19.7 percent). Non-East Coast counties
in the top tier included Boulder County, Colo. (24.1 percent)
and Washtenaw County, Mich. (23.9 percent).
Texas Benefiting as Golden State Loses Shine
According to recent report from Bain & Co., nearly 40
percent of California companies are planning to move jobs
out of that state in the future and most of them are coming
to Texas. Of the companies relocating jobs, 35 percent are
sending them to Texas-more than all the other 48 states combined.
The report cited a number of reasons why Texas fared so well,
including the availability of an educated labor pool, the
low cost of doing business there, and the fact that Texas
is welcoming to business. Planning and zoning approvals, according
to the study, take an average of eight weeks in Texas, compared
with 33 weeks in California.
Study Examines Strongest Tech Economies
Two southern states are among the strongest five technology
economies in the nation, according to a recent study by the
Miliken Institute. Maryland came in at number four and Virginia
at number five with the top three places going to Massachusetts,
California and Colorado. The report analyzed 75 indicators
of technology strength to come up with its ranking including:
research and development, entrepreneurial activity, education,
talent, and the technology sector's prominence in the business
community.
Top Five Cities to Live In Are in the South
Relocate America, a Web site that helps consumers find communities
that fit their needs, has named the top 100 places to live
in the United States in 2004. Communities are nominated by
current or past residents or others familiar with the community's
benefits. The nominated towns are then compared against education,
crime, employment, and housing data for the past year. The
top 10 communities receiving the most nominations were:
1. Venice, Fla.
2. Paragould, Ark.
3. Edmond, Okla.
4. Bonita Springs, Fla.
5. Asheville, N.C.
6. Colorado Springs, Colo.
7. Bartlesville, Okla.
8. Carlsbad, N.M.
9. Huntington Woods, Mich.
10. Madison, Wis.
QUIZ ANSWER
Of the 2 million net lost jobs in years' 2001-2003, the
South actually gained jobs on a net basis. In fact, non-farm
employment in the South between 2001 and 2003 grew by one
percent. So the answer is (b) none.
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