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Latest Location Decisions by Toyota and
DaimlerChrysler a Rural South Development Dream Come True
It's Official: The South's Automotive Industry is Ruling
the Region's Economy
By Mike Randle
In this edition of SB&D you'll find an incredible statistic.
Yet, you won't find it unless we point it out to you. Each
quarter for more than 10 years we have printed virtually every
significant corporate expansion, relocation or startup announced
in the South in our Relocations & Expansions section.
We define significant in that the deal must account for an
investment of $3 million or more and/or creates at least 50
jobs or more. Of course, those are the guidelines for significance
in the economy of 2002-2003. Significant deals in the 1990s
lifted thresholds much higher. Whereas a $3 million, 50-job
deal is significant today, those figures were nothing more
than chump-change for much of the 1990s. In fact, there was
an edition in 1996 when all of the deals profiled in the Relocations
& Expansions section were announced projects of 100 jobs
or more.
But back to our incredible statistic: In the 10 years or
so this magazine has published the Relocations & Expansions
section, we have never had an individual industry sector rack
up 20 deals or more in a single quarter. No, even in the early
years of this magazine, textiles nor apparel chalked up enough
deals on the board to total 20 in a quarter. Electronics,
agribusiness (remember all of those chicken plants in the
early 1990s?), financial services, the government, plastics,
aerospace, dot-coms, wood products, call centers, none of
them could muster 20 notable deals in any quarter over the
last 11 years.
Of the 100 deals featured in this issue's R&E section,
exactly 25 come from the automotive industry. If you are really
an astute reader of SB&D, you'll recall that 17 automotive
deals found their way to our pages in the summer edition of
2002. To date, that was the largest number coming from one
industry. And we saw 13 call centers make the Relocations
& Expansions section in a 1997 edition. However, in nearly
11 years of publishing Southern corporate announcements, those
two challenges are the only two that can even remotely stand
beside this quarter's collection of 25 automotive announcements.
And never before has the South seen a quarter when two automakers
made decisions to locate assembly plants in the region. Toyota
and DaimlerChrysler's decisions in the winter quarter to locate
assembly plants in San Antonio and Savannah, Ga., respectively,
will have a profound, positive effect on the economies of
the South. For one, the decisions widened the Southern Automotive
Corridor by hundreds of miles. Secondly, the two foreign automakers
picked two Southern states that had not turned an assembly
plant deal in decades. That means new communities that were
not in the automotive supplier recruitment game are now in
it because their state has a foreign automaker building a
plant within its borders for the first time.
The 25 significant automotive-related announcements made
in the South in the last three months are even more important
to the South's rural regions. Of those 25 new deals or expansions,
13 were made in a rural South location.
But, was this last quarter an anomaly? Is the automotive
industry dominating economics in general and job making in
particular in the South? More importantly for this section's
purposes, how is the automotive industry affecting the Rural
American South?
The answer to all of those questions can be found in the
Relocations & Expansions sections that have been published
over the last year or so in Southern Business & Development.
Of the 395 significant relocations, expansions or startups
that have announced in the South since the winter of 2001/2002,
90 have been automotive related, or 24 percent of all significant
deals in the region over the last year.
As for the automotive industry's role in jumpstarting the
rural South's economy, of the 90 notable auto deals that have
occurred in the South over the last year, 55 landed in a rural
location and 35 announced a metro location. That means --
if you use the last year as a rule of thumb, a year when more
significant automotive deals occurred in the South than any
year in the last 10 years -- that 61 percent of the time,
automotive suppliers or assemblers are going to pick a rural
site over a metro site in the South. Interesting, huh?
So let's look at this past year (actually 14 months and one
week, or five editions of SB&D) when automotive ruled
the South like no other year. The following chart shows which
states garnered significant automotive deals and how many
of those deals landed in a rural setting. We define rural
as a county with no more than 100,000 residents.
Significant Automotive Deals in the South
(12/1/01 - 2/7/03)
| |
Deals |
Rural |
| AL |
18 |
11 |
| AR |
0 |
0 |
| FL |
2 |
0 |
| GA |
3 |
2 |
| KS |
3 |
2 |
| KY |
7 |
5 |
| LA |
3 |
0 |
| MD |
1 |
0 |
| MS |
7 |
4 |
| MO |
3 |
1 |
| NC |
9 |
6 |
| OK |
3 |
2 |
| SC |
11 |
8 |
| TN |
7 |
5 |
| TX |
5 |
3 |
| VA |
4 |
2 |
| WV |
4 |
4 |
| |
|
|
| Total |
90 |
55 |
By studying the chart, you'll find some states with large
numbers of automotive deals and some with very few. Remember,
the automotive announcements found in the chart are projects
announced in the last 14 months. Georgia turned an impressive
amount of auto supplier projects in 2001 as did Mississippi
that aren't included in this chart.
Our prediction is that 2003 and each year beyond until further
notice will be even more active years for automotive deals
in the South, unless there is some type of catastrophic economic
event. Why? Look at what has occurred at automotive assembly
plants in the South from late 2001 and throughout 2002. These
projects center on assembly plants only and do not include
automotive suppliers. Engine plants are not included as well.
Automotive Assembly Plant Activity in the South 11/01/01
to 2/14/03
* Fall 2001: Ford announces it's investing $375M to expand
Norfolk, Va. plant.
* Fall 2001: As part of a $1 billion expansion, Nissan announces
it is moving its Maxima line from Japan to its existing plant
in Smyrna, Tenn.
* November 2001: Honda begins production at new plant in
Lincoln, Ala.
* December 2001: Honda announces it is expanding its Lincoln
plant one month after opening it, adding 800 new jobs.
* April 1, 2002: Korean automaker Hyundai announces it will
build a new $1 billion, 2000-employee plant south of Montgomery,
Ala.
* July 1, 2002: Carlos Ghosn, president of Nissan, announces
the company is investing an additional $500 million to expand
its unfinished facility in Canton, Miss. The expansion will
result in 1,300 additional jobs.
* July 9, 2002: Honda announces it is doubling production
at its Lincoln, Ala. plant, investing an additional $400 million
and adding 2,000 new jobs.
* September 26, 2002: BMW announces a $500 million upgrade
of its assembly plant in Greer, S.C. that will add 400 new
jobs.
* October 2002: GM announces it is investing $500 million
to retool its Kansas City, Kan. facility to build Malibus.
* November 2002: The company doesn't announce it, but Georgia
officials claim DaimlerChrysler will build a $750 million
van plant near Savannah.
* December 2002: Ford Motor announces it is spending $50
million to expand its Louisville truck plant.
* December 2002: Ford announces it will retool its Kansas
City-area plant in Claymoco, Mo. in order to build multiple
models.
* January 2003: Rumored to close, GM pumps $150 million into
its Doraville, Ga. plant to build minivans.
* Jan 13, 2003: DaimlerChrysler officials confirm Savannah
is site of a new $750 million van plant.
* Feb 5, 2003: Toyota Chooses San Antonio area for $800 million
pickup truck plant.
This tremendous amount of automotive assembly plant activity
-- not suppliers, mind you -- occurred in the South in just
15 months. In 2000 and 2001, several other expansions were
announced, including GM in Shreveport and Oklahoma City and
Saturn and Nissan in Tennessee.
Now let's look at how much domestic or foreign-owned automotive
assembly plant activity occurred outside the South during
the same period.
Automotive Assembly Plant Activity outside the South 11/01/01
to 2/14/03
* August 2002: Ford and Mazda announce a $644 million, 1,400
job expansion of its Flat Rock, Mich. facility to produce
Mazda6 sport sedans.
* August 14, 2002: GM invests $500 million to expand its
Lordstown, Ohio plant.
* October 3, 2002: GM announces $300 million expansion of
its Orion, Mich. plant to build the Pontiac Grand Am
* October 5, 2002: DaimlerChrysler adding 1,000 jobs and
spending $35 million at Detroit pickup truck facility.
* Jan. 8, 2003: Toyota announces it is adding 400 workers
at its Gibson County, Ind. facility that makes Sequoia and
Tundra trucks. The facility recently went through an $800
million expansion.
* Feb. 11, 2003: Ford announces another $644 million expansion
of its Flat Rock, Mich. facility to build Mustangs.
As you can see, there has been more assembly plant activity
in the South in the last 15 months than what's been seen in
all regions of the country combined. But the last 15 months
do not tell the whole story outside the South. Like other
assembly plants in the South that expanded in the months of
2001 not covered by our study, Ford expanded its Dearborn,
Mich. plant by the tune of $2 billion (that's with a "b")
and invested $400 million in its Chicago facility.
But even with those two additional expansions that occurred
in 2001, the score is in and it favors the South in a big
way. Outside the South: Eight assembly plants expanded since
Jan. 1, 2001 with no new assembly plants announced. The South:
Three new plant announcements and 16 plant expansions since
Jan. 1, 2001. That's a 19 to eight score, or a blowout in
automotive industry terms.
Besides the comparisons, here's what we do know about the
nation's automotive industry. According to Site Selection
magazine, a well known trade book that covers not only the
U.S. but the world's economic development scene, 2002 is the
fourth year-in-a-row that facilities devoted to automotive
manufacturing claimed the No. 1 spot in new and expanded plants.
It could be argued that with such increased assembly plant
activity -- more in 2001 and 2002 than the Midwest, which
remains the automotive center of the universe -- the South
at some point in time will unseat the Midwest as the nation's
No. 1 producer of automobiles. It's SB&D's view that is
not only a possibility, it is inevitable. That possibility
or fact, whichever way you believe, bodes well for the Rural
American South.
More than any Industry in History, Automotive is the Rural
American South's White Knight
Over the years many Southern state governments have gone
to great lengths to improve the economies of their rural regions.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in increased incentives, advertising
grants, improved infrastructure, worker training and public
relations work have gone into building the Rural American
South. These efforts have helped, but have not yet gotten
the rural South over the hump.
What may eventually get the rural South over the hump is
an industry rather than an effort. If the Southern Automotive
Corridor is indeed a permanent, sustainable region, then automotive-related
investments and job generation could have a greater impact
on the rural South than any industry since the textile surge
experienced throughout much of the early and mid-20th century.
Of course, much of that business no longer exists in the rural
South.
In an article published in Industry Week in February, Albert
W. Niemi, dean of Southern Methodist University's Cox School
of Business, said the South's rise in automotive manufacturing
is "irreversible" now. That sounds like a ringing
endorsement for a sustainable industry for decades to come.
Further supporting the notion that automotive is a sustainable
industry is Garel Rhys, director for the Centre for Automotive
Industry Research at Cardiff University in Wales. Mr. Rhys
predicts that in the next 20 years there will be a need for
150 to 200 new automotive assembly plants worldwide. That's
an additional 45 million vehicles units, an incredible number.
We asked Lindsay Chappell, the Mid-South Bureau Chief for
Automotive News if the South's automotive industry alone can
transform the rural South's economy in coming years. "Yes,"
Chappell said. "In fact, it's already happening. Automotive
companies will continue to look to smaller markets for land
and available work forces in the South."
The Southern Automotive Corridor is Far From Complete
Yes, there will be other automotive assembly plants locating
in the American South. Already there are 24 major facilities
built or planned, nine of which are foreign-owned. The next
one will probably be Mitsubishi.
But where future plants locate in the South will mean a great
deal to the region's overall rural economic health. For example,
the latest round of plant announcements -- Toyota in San Antonio
and DaimlerChrysler in Savannah -- will do more for the rural
South as a whole than if those two deals landed in the center
of the Southern Automotive Corridor, which is now Alabama
and Tennessee. Those two locations will force Toyota and DaimlerChrysler
to create a new automotive supplier network, which certainly
will have a positive economic effect on rural regions of east
and south Texas as well as the Carolinas, south and central
Georgia and north Florida. Currently, no automotive supplier
networks exist in any of those regions except for the Carolinas
and central and west Georgia.
By looking at the map included in this story, you'll find
the only Southern states void of major automotive assembly
plants are Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina and West Virginia.
North Carolina does feature an extensive automotive supplier
base as does West Virginia. Also, Toyota operates a large
engine plant in West Virginia.
So, in an ideal Rural American South world, the next plants
coming down the pike must locate in Arkansas, North Carolina,
Florida and West Virginia. While that's not likely, Arkansas,
since it made the short list for Toyota and North Carolina
are no-brainer locations for future assembly plants. Jacksonville,
it should be noted, made the short list for DaimlerChrysler
and Toyota officials have been pleased with their engine plant
operations in West Virginia.
At the beginning of this year, nearly 60,000 workers are
employed at automotive assembly plants in the American South.
Expect that figure to grow in coming years. We estimate that
spin-off jobs from automotive suppliers locating or expanding
in the South have created around 24,000 jobs in the last 14
months. Expect that figure to grow this year as well.
Regardless of where future assembly operations choose to
operate in the South, therefore defining regions where automotive
suppliers will set up shop, it's clear that the industry is
ruling the region's economy. And it's also clear to us that
if any industry can improve the rural South's economy, automotive
is it.
You may contact Mike Randle regarding this story at mike@sb-d.com.
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