NCPA


Policy Issues

NCPA Publications

Both Sides

Editorial Opinions

Audio/Visual



NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS
HOME / DONATE / ONE LEVEL UP / ABOUT NCPA / CONTACT US
Economic-Development Specialists Turn Attention to Smaller Firms
Daily Policy Digest

State & Local Issues / State Business Environment

Tuesday, February 11, 2003
When a city or a town snags a huge new auto plant or a corporate headquarters, local politicians and the media trumpet the good news. But today, local economic-development commissions are turning their sights to smaller companies and asking how they can help.

  • Attracting employers from other locales takes up about 15 percent of economic-development officials' time, according to experts.
  • The other 85 percent is spent trying to retain local employers.
The new emphasis on smaller firms is prompted by the realization that they create most of the jobs local economies depend upon.

  • Roughly half of the private-sector work force is employed at firms with 500 or fewer employees.
  • Of the 7,610 corporate expansion projects costing more than $1 million last year, only 123 of them involved more than 500 jobs.
  • The average expansion project added 53.4 jobs.
Companies tend to move to find lower labor costs, lower electricity costs, to follow a major customer or to find lower taxes.

Source: Jeff Bailey, "Firms Get More Attention, Help From Agencies," Wall Street Journal, February 11, 2003.

For text (WSJ subscription required)
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1044909486200020383-search,00.html

For more on State Business Environment
http://www.ncpa.org/iss/sta/


12770 Coit Rd., Suite 800 - Dallas, TX 75251-1339 - 972/386-6272 - Fax 972/386-0924
601 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 900 South Building - Washington, DC 20004 - 202/220-3082 - Fax 202/220-3096
Copyright © 2002 National Center for Policy Analysis - All rights reserved.