'Reality gap: U.S. struggles while D.C. booms'
The DC metro area will never faulter unless their is a drastic cut in government spending! In the meantime If their is a drastic cut in spending this will affect Maryland and Virginia enormously. These two states depends on the high paying government jobs to bring money back home! Politicians from both of these states depend on the federal government and it also keeps them from making hard decisions because most of the time the governemnt foots a larger percentage of the bill from transportation to schools than for other states. An example is the DC Metro Subway which the federal governemnt is footing half of the bill!
Washington has been largely shielded from the economic downturn, even in 2009, when most states and cities were hit the hardest.
During 2009, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported more than 11,000 initial claimants for unemployment insurance associated with extended mass layoff events in the Flint metropolitan area and less than half that number for the D.C. metro area — a region that includes the District itself and the wealthy, highly educated counties of Northern Virginia and southwest Maryland. It’s a sobering reminder of the District’s distance from the epicenters of the Great Recession.
In part, that’s because the federal government drives about a third of the national capital region’s economy by direct employment — Uncle Sam employs about 10 percent of the area’s 3 million-person work force — or by federal procurement dollars, more than $20 billion of which landed in nearby Fairfax County, Va., alone last year.
“This is our auto industry, or financial services, or entertainment,” said Stephen Fuller, director of George Mason University’s Center for Regional Analysis, alluding, respectively, to the economic foundations of the Detroit, New York and Los Angeles metropolitan areas. “The federal government is our business. And on top of that, we have an administration that’s clearly expanding the role of the federal government in the context of the national economy — as a manager and as a provider of funds. That hasn’t been the case in the past, except in the case of wars.”
The economic crisis has been a job creator for those outside government, too. Many New York firms have opened new offices and created new jobs in D.C. to deal with the growing web of regulations. Northrop Grumman — one of many contractors profiting from government growth — is moving its operations from Southern California to Northern Virginia. Several other firms have moved here of late, too.
Even media companies, which have been hammered by the economy and bad industrywide trends, are hiring in town. Competition among Bloomberg, POLITICO and other outlets has resulted in bidding wars for reporters with sophisticated understanding of government policy.
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Edited by calwinston, 19 July 2010 - 12:53 PM.