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Economic Impact Analysis: Principles and Applications

Join us for a comprehensive workshop on the principles and metrics of economic impact analysis. Learn how to estimate the economic impact of events, projects, and industries, and how to incorporate important elements in your report.

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Economic Impact Analysis: Principles and Applications

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  1. Foundations of Applied Economic Development Research August 18-20, 2015 Arlington, VA Day 3

  2. Instructors Terry Clower Northern Virginia Chair, Professor of Public Policy, and Deputy Director of the Center for Regional Analysis, George Mason University Tom Tveidt Research EconomistSYNEVA Economics

  3. Agenda Day 3 Start 8:30 • Principles of Economic & Fiscal Impact Analysis Break 10:30-10:45 • Learning Lab – Presentation Adjourn Noon

  4. Principles of Economic and Fiscal Impact Analysis

  5. Teaching Goals • Introduce students to the logic and metrics of impact analysis • Input-output method • Recognize important elements in a report

  6. What is Economic Impact Analysis? • Estimating how spending associated with a particular event, project, or industry flows through a regional economy.

  7. What Economic Impact AnalysisIS NOT • It is not the same as fiscal impact analysis. • We will get to that shortly • It is not usually a risk-adjusted analysis. • It is not cost-benefit analysis.

  8. Why do we need impact analyses? • Allocate resources among competing projects • Assess the potential for an investment policy • Retaining an existing industry • Attracting a new industry • Putting “hard numbers” on political strategies to test their veracity

  9. Steps in Performing aResearch Project • Identifying stakeholders • Deciding on scope of the analysis • Geographic • Type of analysis • Timing • Understanding costs and identifying resources

  10. Input-Output Models • Developed by Wassily Leontief (awarded Nobel Prize in Economics in 1970s ) • Part of National Income and Product Accounts • Extend ideas of the economic base model by disaggregating production into a set of sectors • Produces multipliers by sector • Can be extended to explore issues of income distribution, tax policy, development strategies etc.

  11. Production Function Production Function for a Spiral-bound notebook

  12. Input-Output Models Input-Output Models add Households • both suppliers of labor inputs to regional industries and purchasers of regional outputs • earnings include: • wages & salaries • proprietors’ income • directors’ fees • employer contributions for healthcare insurance less • personal contributions for social insurance • household column based on PCE

  13. Intermediate Inputs & Imports • Intermediate inputs = consumption of goods and services purchased from other industries. • Imports = consumption of goods brought in from outside the region

  14. Value-Added Components • Value added = gross output (sales or other receipts and other operating income, plus inventory change) minus intermediate inputs. • Includes compensation of employees, profits, dividends, can include indirect business tax and nontax liability.

  15. Final Use Components • Includes personal consumption expenditures, gross private fixed investment, change in business inventories, exports of goods and services, imports of goods and services.

  16. Input-Output Table

  17. Input-Output Table

  18. Input-Output Table 18

  19. Input-Output Table 19

  20. Input-Output Table 20

  21. How are multipliers calculated? • National source = national data • RIMS II, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis • Based on location quotients • Assumes Regional production meets local needs first, and the leftovers are exported

  22. Steps in estimating multipliers(based on National I-O Accounts) • Prepare adjusted national industry-by-industry direct requirements table • Prepare regional industry-by-industry direct requirements table • prepare industry-by-industry total requirements table • derive multipliers

  23. Input-Output Models • Relatively Simple (compared to direct measurement) – but problematic because… • Does not account for variance in regional consumption characteristics • Neglects “cross-hauling” • Adjust for regional purchases

  24. Input-Output Models • Direct effects: • The direct activity(s) of the project in question • Usually defined the direct effects in terms of output or employment. • Most important step in conducting the analysis!! • Indirect effects: • Capture the impacts on firms that (directly and indirectly) supply the activity defined in the direct effect(s). (Type I multiplier) • Induced effects: • Captures impacts of spending by households receiving income based on direct and indirect effects (Type II multiplier)

  25. Impacts on… • Output – measure of transactions • Employment – headcount • Labor income – wages, salaries, some benefits • Value added – GRP equivalent • Proprietor’s income • Property income • Taxes on production and imports less subsidies • Gross operating surplus

  26. Input-Output Models Input-Output Assumptions: • Constant returns to scale • Linear and homogenous production functions • Perfectly elastic factor supplies • Constant technology • Note: Some commercial models adjust for these.

  27. Input-Output Models(Other Considerations) • Study area definition • Gross vs. Net Impacts • Accounting for leakages/spending realignment • Timing • Adjusting for prices • Defining the direct effect • Margins

  28. The Functional Economic Area Residential Location of Labor Force Travel Corridors Impact Site Consumer Locations Location of Support Services Location of Supporting Industries

  29. Input-Output Models Defining the Direct Effect • Most important step • New firm coming to town • Industry already exists in the area: use established multipliers • Industry not in area: may have to build estimates based on firm expenditure patterns • Bill of goods approach • Costly, time consuming, fraught with error, probably can’t get detailed data

  30. Timing of the Study • a-priori • Projected spending • Realistic? • After the event • Actual spending • Appropriate timing depends on purpose • Comparatively few after the fact studies

  31. Projects • Building a -- whatever • Bridges • Roads • Reservoirs • Buildings • Others?

  32. Impacts by Endurance • Temporary impacts of construction activities • Construction may last several months or several years (for some roads, never ending) • Once construction stops, impacts cease • Recurring Impacts • Operations • Maintenance / repair • Net or gross? Opportunity costs?

  33. Construction Budget Data • Do you have access to detailed data? • Common way: Spending $150 million on building a new highway • Less common: Detailed budgets

  34. Land & ROW acquisition Engineering & design Environmental studies Archeological studies Mitigation Contracting Bonding Public relations Concrete Aggregates Steel/iron rods Contractors Fuel Labor Attorneys Insurance Examples of HighwayConstruction Budget Items

  35. Landscaping Engineering testing Environmental cleanup Traffic monitoring Labor Maintenance repair Concrete Aggregates Steel/iron rods Contractors Fuel Utilities Examples of HighwayOperating Budget Items

  36. What do you count? • Impacts of a highway include the new distribution center that locates nearby? • Impacts of a new reservoir include the new powerplant that uses the water supply? • Impact of the Golden Gate Bridge include increased tourism?

  37. Special Events • Spending by: • Organizer/host • Participant • Visitors • Media • Sponsors

  38. Industries • New firm coming to town • Industry already exists in the area: use established multipliers • Industry not in area: may have to build estimates based on firm expenditure patterns • Bill of goods approach • Costly, time consuming, fraught with error, probably can’t get detailed data

  39. Industries • You can estimate impacts using two types of inputs: • Sales (adjusted), output • Employment • Employment is often the most readily available.

  40. Common User Errors in Conducting Impact Analyses • All benefits and no negative consequences • Displacement issues (What were residents doing before there was a baseball stadium?) • Overstating the net new growth • Timing of Impacts • Investment Today, Impacts Tomorrow

  41. Tax Impacts vs Fiscal Impacts • Direct tax revenues from source • Infrastructure • Sales and use taxes • Events • Sales, hotel occupancy, special assessments and permit fees • Industries • Property taxes, sales and use taxes, permit and license fees, income taxes, etc. • Indirect tax revenues • Sales and use taxes based on transactions, values of surrounding properties • Some share of property taxes (may be best to leave out and be conservative)

  42. Tax Impacts vs Fiscal Impacts • Induced tax revenues • Use total earnings • Personal consumption estimates from Survey of Current Business, taxable, % in region • Apply tax rate • Do same for property taxes. • Some commercial models offer estimates of state and local indirect taxes

  43. Fiscal Impacts Analysis • Adds in government costs: • Protective services • Fire – inspections • Police – security, traffic control, respond to calls • Debt service • Other services

  44. Un-Measurable Impacts • Impacts that are real and have quantity, but are very difficult to assess. • Value of media exposure • Long term impact on tourism, business attraction (nothing draws a crowd like a lot of people) • Is an event an amenity that enhances the value of nearby properties?

  45. Intangible Impacts • Impacts that are real, but are not practically observable or measurable. • Civic pride • Place bonding • Community cohesiveness • Other?

  46. Getting Professional Modeling Help: The Options Available • RIMS II – U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis • EMSI– Economic Modeling Specialists, Inc. • Implan – MIG, Inc. • REMI – Regional Economic Models, Inc. (REMI) • Policy Insight • Transight • EDG – Economic Development Group TREDIS

  47. Module Conclusions • Economic & fiscal impact analysis are valuable tools – when properly done. • State clearly or understand the parameters and limitations. • Best analysis does not always result in the biggest number. • If conducting or commissioning an impact study, manage stakeholder expectations.

  48. Team Presentations • 10 minute max • Sell your community

  49. Wrap-Up

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