* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Current Situation
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Community & Capital • Capital – Any resource capable of producing other resources. This definition forces us to distinguish between consumption and investment. • Forms of Capital – – – – Capital Goods Land Financial Capital Human Capital Human Capital • Education and training of the workforce plays a dominant role in explaining different levels of output, according to Schultz. • Businesses invest in preventative health care and education because they expect both to make their employees more productive. • In completing our formal education, we make an investment in ourselves and we expect investments to pay off in the form of increased income. Public vs. Private Capital • Private Capital – Capital owned and controlled by individuals or groups of individuals. (i.e. education) • Public Capital – Capital owned and controlled by governments or communities, such as schools or bridges. Mobility of Capital • Land and many forms of capital goods, such as buildings and roads, are not mobile. Thus individuals and communities have to figure out how to make these forms of capital productive. – By contrast, financial and human capital are quite mobile. Money can move to wherever it can earn the highest return. • Financial capital has become increasingly mobile. Mobility of Capital • Human capital has also become increasingly mobile, and this factor has raised concerns about public investments in education. • Communities are encouraged to invest in schools because a well-educated citizenry is fundamental to economic growth. – Rural Youth Dilemma Sources of Capital • Savings – Represent major source of capital – Savers tend to deposit their money in local financial institutions – Money is reinvested by these financial institutions • Interest – A charge to the borrower for use of money Sources of Capital • Bonds – When a large amount of capital is needed for a long-term capital investment, loans can be made in a formal contractual agreement called bonds. – Bonds pay interest and are issued by governments or business corporations. – Represent a promise to repay a designated amount of money at the end of a period of 20 to 30 years. – Bonds are an important mechanism by which rural communities raise capital but retain local control. Sources of Capital • Equity Capital – Involves selling share in a company to the general public through the stock market. – Individuals invest money in shares of the company – These individuals receive a portion of the company’s profits in the form of dividends paid on their shares. – Venture Capital: another form of equity. Represents capital that comes from investors who are willing to take risks and be patient at they wait for a return. The Changing Rules of Capital • Deregulation – Banking deregulation involves a decrease in the degree to which the government limits and oversees: • The costs of credit and services • The geographic location of financial institutions • The variety of services offered by financial institutions • For rural areas, it has become increasingly difficult to keep local capital invested locally. – The international market has increased the outflow of capital from rural areas. Strategies for Attracting and Retaining Capital in Rural Communities • 1. Keeping Capital Local -- Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 – An effective tool for challenging the lending practices of commercial banks and forcing them to be more concerned with issues of local economic development – Was passed to prevent lenders from “redlining” loans and services to neighborhoods on the basis of race or economic class of the population. Strategies for Attracting and Retaining Capital in Rural Communities • 2. New Sources of Capital – Federal Community Development Block Grants: Uses an initial infusion of federal funds that can be recirculated within a community guided by local development organizations with private status but local government sanction. – The loan repayment is recycled within the community. Strategies for Attracting and Retaining Capital • 3. Capital Retention Through Risk Reduction – Reduces risk to commercial banks on any given loan by using secondary markets for rural business loans. – Secondary markets allow rural banks to package together a number of business loans, which they initiate and service. Investors bear the risk. – Loan guarantees by the state and federal government spread the risk of capital investment in rural areas between the public and private sector. Strategies for Attracting and Retaining Capital • 4. Tax Concessions – Tax abatements reduce taxes for investment that are made in certain business ventures deemed socially desirable. – Other laws reduce the tax burden of those who invest in specific geographic areas by starting new businesses or expanding existing firms. Strategies for Attracting and Retaining Capital • 4. Tax Concessions – Governments offer tax abatements in an effort to attract industry. – Within new industry/businesses comes the need for public capital investment in the form of schools, law enforcement, emergency services, sewers, roads, etc. – The reduction of taxation offered to new enterprises erodes the tax base needed to support these public capital investments. Understanding Local Economies Goals To present export base theory as a model of the way a local economy works. To relate general export base theory to your home state and community. To use the export base model to examine local economic development alternatives. Events That Have Impacted Local Economies Employment declines in agriculture, manufacturing, and natural resourcebased industries. National shift toward a service and information-based economy. Development of new technology. Internationalization of the U.S. economy. Structural shifts within agriculture and manufacturing. Why an interest in economic development? Lack of local job opportunities for young people. Obsolescence of job skills among older workers. Over-dependence on agriculture or other single industry. Need for additional tax revenue at the local level. Concerns over the quality of life. Loss of local control. Challenges Facing Communities Maintaining and enhancing the competitiveness of local businesses. Further diversifying the local economy. Easing the transition for displaced families. Providing technical and educational assistance for local units of government. Identifying options for increasing jobs and income. Helping conserve and manage the area’s natural resources. Export Base Theory Basic Industry—Consists of those local firms that sell goods and services outside the local areas. Service Industry—Consists of those firms that sell goods and services in local markets. Includes inputs to basic industries and goods and services to local residents. Figure 1. Economic Activities of a Community Rest of the World $ G&S Good and Services Export Firms Labor Services $ $ G&S Good and Services Service Firms (Input Suppliers) $ Labor Labor Local Population (Households) $ $ Service Firms (Local Population) $ G&S G&S Imports (Leakages $ G&S $ Figure 2. The Local Economy— Leaking Resources? How Basic Industries Influence Local Economic Development Direct Impacts—sales, jobs, and income generated directly by firms producing for non-local markets. Indirect Impacts—sales, jobs, and income generated by firms selling goods and services to basic industries. Induced Impacts—sales, jobs, and income generated by spending activities of employees in direct and indirect firms. Multiplier—sum of direct, indirect, and induced impacts. Defining Economic Development: Some Perspectives Growth measure in economic or demographic terms. A particular event in a community, such as a new shopping facility or industrial plant. Programs to improve local services, increase equality of opportunity, and expand the economic based of the community. Defining Economic Development: Some Perspectives (cont.) What it is, however, is a system for meeting the needs and wants of people in a particular geographic area over time. The capacity to meet these needs serves as the focus of the the economic development process over time. Economic Development Alternatives Economic development successes are likely to be based on a mix of activities . . . Improve efficiency of existing firms. Improve ability to capture dollars. Attract new basic employers. Encourage business formation. Increase aid from broader government. Improve Efficiency of Existing Firms Start educational programs to improve management skills. Start a business-industry visitation program. Identify capital sources to encourage business growth. Provide educational programs to keep local businesses aware of latest R&D. Improve quality of the local labor force. Provide local and regional services that compete in price and quality. Improve Ability to Capture Dollars Survey consumers to assess market potentials. Revitalize downtown shopping districts or other retail areas. Develop training programs for local retail and service. Encourage residents and businesses to buy locally. Seek to combine sales/service activities with recreational events. Organize the retail and business community (I.e. Chamber of Commerce) Attract New Basic Employers Develop local industrial, office or commercial sites; have public services in place; provide information on local labor supply. Develop local and regional facilities (such as transportation, recreation, business services, communications) Provide local tax incentives that reduce location or operating costs of new or expanding firms. Attract New Basic Employers (cont.) Lobby for state and federal programs and facilities that could be located in the community. Explore non-traditional sources of employment—retirees, recreation resources, trade centers, bedroom community for nearby urban centers. Encourage Business Formation Form capital groups to invest private funds locally. Provide counseling and education assistance to those wishing to start a new business. Study the market potential for new retail, wholesale, service, and input-providing businesses. Encourage Business Formation (cont.) Be aware that adversity often stimulates entrepreneurship. Adopt an encouraging community attitude toward new businesses. Increase Aid Received from Broader Government Seek to ensure that assistance programs for the elderly, handicapped, and others are being fully tapped. Obtain aid from state and federal governments in the form of grants for local projects (such as water and sewer systems, streets, parks).