1 / 0

Lt. Governor Greg Bell

Lt. Governor Greg Bell. Utah-Accolades & Headlines. Utah # 1 – “ Best State for Business” ( Forbes 2011 ) Utah #1 – “Best Managed State” (Pew Center, 2011) Utah #1 – “Expected Economic Recovery” (ALEC, 2011) Salt Lake –“Worlds 15 best new cities for business” (Fortune Magazine).

kirra
Download Presentation

Lt. Governor Greg Bell

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lt. Governor Greg Bell
  2. Utah-Accolades & Headlines Utah #1 – “Best State for Business” (Forbes 2011) Utah #1 – “Best Managed State” (Pew Center, 2011) Utah #1 – “Expected Economic Recovery” (ALEC, 2011) Salt Lake –“Worlds 15 best new cities for business” (Fortune Magazine)
  3. Utah-Accolades & Headlines Business Facilities Magazine ranks Utah: #1 “Quality of Life” #2 “Best Education Climate” #3 “Best Business Climate” #7 “Economic Growth Potential #7 “Employment Leaders” #8 “Best Transportation Infrastructure” #10 “Best Business Tax Climate”
  4. Utah Quality of Life Utah residents enjoy life. And why shouldn’t they? Utah #1 “America’s Best States To Live” (Forbes) 5 National Parks 14 Ski Resorts Economic Vitality Quality Health Care Affordable Housing Low Crime Rate
  5. Good Governance Positions Utah to Lead the Economic Recovery Rainy Day Fund of $500M & other significant reserves AAA Bond Rating Pro Business Environment Low taxes Low Energy Cost (lowest natural gas rates in US; 4th lowest power rates, US Energy Information Administration) Sustainable, Competitive Incentive Programs Stable & Predictable Legal & Regulatory Climate Unprecedented Partnerships Balanced Resource Committee Governor’s Education Excellence Committee
  6. Utah - A Global State Utah is the only state to double exports over the last 5 years International trade directly supports 90,000 jobs in Utah Trade Missions: Taking Utah’s business leaders to meet with foreign government & business counterparts Source: GOED
  7. Utah Economic Clusters Aerospace & Aviation Defense & Homeland Security Energy & Natural Resources Financial Services Life Sciences Software Development & IT Outdoor Products & Recreation
  8. Recruitment & Incentives 2011 efforts by the GOED have resulted in 15 post performance incentives. These 15 incentives amount to real economic growth for Utah: 8,600 new jobs $2.4 billion in capital investment $4.9 billion in wages over 20 years Utah’s Wasatch Front nicknamed “Silicon Slopes”
  9. Davis County & Utah’s Industry Cluster Davis County is uniquely positioned for Utah’s Aviation/Aerospace & Defense/Homeland Security Clusters Current or Future Home to: Hill AFB Falcon Hill Janicki Industries Northrop Grumman ATK Lockheed Martin
  10. Utah’s Workforce Educated, Motivated Bi-lingual, Tech Savvy American’s Youngest Median Age Two Level 1 Research Universities University of Utah surpasses MIT to become America’s #1 business startup University (AUTM & Inc. Magazine)
  11. Percent of Age Group With a Bachelor’s Degree or Higher 2010 Source: US Census
  12. Poverty vs. Educational Attainment “A mother’s educational attainment is the most consistent determining factor to ending intergenerational poverty.” – Kristen Cox, Executive Director, DWS All Individuals in Utah 25 Years and Older Source: 2009 ACS PUMS Data for the State of Utah, U.S. Census Bureau
  13. Where Do Davis County Students Go? Excludes BYU, UCAT, & other Proprietary Schools Source: Utah State Board of Regents
  14. Economic Conditions Third Quarter GDP Growth Was 2 ½ percent, in line with the pace of modest recovery Labor market conditions are stable Inflation has recently eased a bit Europe appears to be sliding into a deeper recession
  15. Third Quarter Growth Matched Recovery Average Source: Economic & Monetary Policy Developments, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 11/10/2011
  16. Source: Economic & Monetary Policy Developments, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 11/10/2011
  17. Source: Economic & Monetary Policy Developments, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 11/10/2011
  18. Source: Economic & Monetary Policy Developments, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 11/10/2011
  19. Source: Economic & Monetary Policy Developments, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 11/10/2011
  20. Connect with Greg Bell Blog.LG.utah.gov @LtGovGregBell
More Related