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Dr. David Gallo Department of Economics Center for Economic Development California State University, Chico
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Personal income Employment Unemployment rate Population growth
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Effect of net migration (1995-2006)
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Population growth in Mendocino County is strongly influenced by in migration Willingness of people to move here depends on maintaining local amenities, natural and otherwise including medical and other services Availability and cost of appropriate housing is also important
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Agricultural, Timber, and Mining Exports Tourism Spending Retiree Income Retail Leakage Federal & State Jobs & Dollars Outside Contractors and Materials Purchases Goods and Services Exports
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Any industry that brings dollars from outside the area An economic base industry can involve: the production and outside sales of goods or services (agriculture or medical services, e.g.) activities that draw in outside spending (local production of federal or state services) outside spending drawn to the area by the quality of local amenities (tourism, or retirees)
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Where local goods and services are purchased with income earned outside the local area, local income is generated The spending can be from tourists, resident retirees, or any individuals from outside the area shopping locally
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Unless sales are to non- residents, retail, services, and most residential construction are not economic base activities The size of the economic base determines the amount of local retail, services, and construction These activities cannot be expanded locally without an increase in economic base income
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Increase injections Expansion of local economic base industries Attract retirees or tourist spending Reduce leakages Establish or expand businesses that supply inputs to economic base industries Locally produce more of the goods and services purchased by residents
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(1) Increase production and sales of products complementary with existing economic base industries: increases demand for the products of the cluster (2) Increase local production of inputs for the economic base industry: reduces leakages from the spending stream Example: Visitor or tourism industry (1) Schedule local events to draw additional visitors (2) Gift shop or craft sales: sales of more locally produced goods
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Agriculture: Logging: $95.14 million Fruit Farming”: $53.41 million Manufacturing: Sawmills: $147.52 million Wineries: $279.65 million Seafood Preparation and Packaging: $62.33 million Government: State and Local Non-education: $261.12 million State and Local Education: $84.34 Federal Non-Military: $12.64 million
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The IMPLAN model is an input-output model originally designed by the U.S. Forest Service. The model estimates the indirect (purchases from local businesses) and induced (local spending of additional income) that result from an increase in economic base activity. The total impact is the sum of the direct, indirect and induced impacts.
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Multipliers are calculated as the total impact divided by the direct impact They can be calculated for output (gross value of production), income, or employment Multipliers are larger when more of the indirect (input purchases) and induced (retail and services) activity is local or when less direct income is created per dollar of sales Usually misinterpreted as implying that a larger multiplier means a larger local impact Income multiplier for sawmills is 2.11 Income multiplier for wine production is 1.93
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For sawmills there is less direct local income per dollar of sales ($0.31), but significant local input purchases (indirect sales=$614,095 per million $’s in direct sales and 89% of the value of inputs are purchased locally) Wine production generates less direct local income per dollar of sales ($0.25) and the industry generates purchases of fewer local inputs (indirect sales = $289,143 per million $’s in direct sales and currently 39% of the value of inputs are purchased locally) Yet, given the impact on tourism (lodging, restaurant sales, etc), wineries may have a much larger impact on the local economy
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Economic growth is achieved through development of economic base industries Focusing on industries where local production of inputs is feasible will generate the greatest impact on local income and employment Additional focus should be on complementary industries: industries where products and services are used together
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