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Return to Virginia Business - February 2003

Virginians are rich and smart
But at research, the Old Dominion is an also-ran

by Peter Galuszka

- Unemployment rates
(metro areas)
- Unemployment rates
(states)
- Civilian labor force
- Number unemployed
- Percent of labor force
without work

- Employment growth
- Patents and research
- Mix of Employment
- Per capita income

- Education attainment

How does Virginia compare with its sister states included in the Fifth District of the Federal Reserve System? Not too badly. Overall, the Old Dominion seems to be richer and better educated than most of her sister states, despite some notable misfires. That’s the overall conclusion as Virginia Business publishes its third annual “State of the State” survey. Since this month’s cover story explores the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, it seems appropriate that we tailor this year’s “State of the State” project to compare Virginia and its largest urban areas with her sister states in the Fifth Fed District, including West Virginia, North and South Carolina, Maryland and the District of Columbia. As we have in the past three years, Virginia Business contracted for the data with Chmura Economics & Analytics, a Richmond econometric forecasting firm.

A warning, however. What tends to pull Virginia’s data up is Northern Virginia, which we could not separate from the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). So, there’s a chance that some twin-income professional families boasting of at least a pair of master’s degrees and working for the federal government, law firms or technology companies in affluent, Montgomery County, Md., might somehow be seen as representing equally affluent and well-educated Fairfax County.

According to the Chmura data, Virginians have more high school diplomas than other Fifth District areas, although residents of Maryland and the Washington MSA have more bachelor’s degrees or better. The bias toward D.C. shows up in per capita income, too. The Washington MSA by far has the biggest per capita income, $40,046. Next on the list is Raleigh-Durham, home of several fine universities and the Research Triangle, with $32,537; Baltimore, a heavily unionized, Northern-style city, with $32,265; and Richmond, coming up close behind, with $31,292. In this category, Richmond beats out Charlotte, which has emerged as the nation’s No. 2 banking center and is growing at a pace that makes Richmond seem sleepy.

Virginia likewise fares well in unemployment rates, an important indicator since the economy continues to sputter. Charlottesville had the lowest of the regions in the pack, at 2.4 percent, followed by Roanoke, at 3.4 percent. Boosted by federal spending, the Washington area’s jobless rate was only 3.5 percent and the other two large metro areas in Virginia — Richmond and Hampton Roads — tallied a respectable 4.3 percent.

The lesson here is that despite the sputtering economic recovery, Virginia’s major urban areas are diverse enough and service-oriented enough to weather bad times. A big spate of new defense spending in all of these areas, including Roanoke, is helping, as well. The more one heads south into manufacturing and farm areas, the worse the economy gets. Charlotte, for example, weighed in at a 5.6 percent jobless rate because of its heavy reliance on textile and other manufacturing plants. Danville, which has taken huge hits as apparel firms move across the border and tobacco falters, brings up the rear with an unemployment rate of 7.4 percent. The Chmura data doesn’t cover this, but in far Southwestern Virginia some moribund coalfield areas such as Dickenson County have jobless rates better than 10 percent.

Where’s the Achilles’ heel for the Old Dominion? Surprisingly, research and development. Virginia is only No. 3, behind Maryland and North Carolina, in the number of patents recorded. Embarrassingly, in 1999, Virginia’s total number of 778 patents was 161 short of those registered in the Raleigh-Durham area alone. How come? The Research Triangle and three world-class universities. Virginia has nothing like it in one concentrated spot. Despite the aspirations of schools like Virginia Tech to become research powerhouses, they have a long way to go to approach the Tar Heel and Terrapin states. With severe budget cuts in Virginia’s higher education, it’s going to be even harder to catch up.

Return to Virginia Business - February 2003


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