From Site Selection magazine,
November 2013 SUNNY DAY IN GEORGIA
Gov. Nathan Deal says a diversified
economy, low-cost energy, enviable logistics assets and an ear for what
businesses require to succeed and to expand are what separated his state from
the pack in Site Selection’s annual ranking of state business climates.
by MARK AREND
mark.arend @siteselection.com
mark.arend @siteselection.com
No longer a
bridesmaid, Georgia claims the limelight in 2013 as the state with the best
business climate, according to Site Selection’s annual ranking of states’
attractiveness to corporate facility investors.
The Peach State placed
fourth in last year’s ranking, second in 2011 and sixth in 2010. North
Carolina, the belle of the ball for several of the publication’s Top Business
Climate rankings in recent years — it finished first again last year — places
second in 2013, followed by Texas, Ohio and Tennessee in the top five slots.
The Southeast is once again heavily represented in the top 10, but Indiana
joins the mix this year, rising from a 12th-place finish in 2012.
The ranking is based
50 percent on a survey of corporate site selectors (they ranked Georgia fourth
best; Texas, South Carolina and North Carolina fared better) and 50 percent on
a set of criteria that includes the states’ competitiveness rank as published
in the May issue, qualified projects so far in 2013 and on a per capita basis,
and state tax burdens on new and mature firms as compiled by the Tax Foundation
and KPMG Location Matters analysis. Qualified projects means those that meet Site
Selection’s definition: a new or expanded commercial facility of at least $1
million investment, creation of 50 or more new jobs or a minimum of 20,000 sq.
ft. (1,850 sq. m.) of new space.
(Picture) Gov. Nathan
Deal (left) presents Baxter CEO Bob Parkinson with a street sign bearing the
pharmaceutical giant’s name at the August 2012 ground-breaking ceremony for its
US$1-billion plant near Covington, Ga.
Photo courtesy of Georgia Dept. of Economic Development
Well before Site
Selection completed its state business climate analysis, several influential
parties had already determined that Georgia has the best US business climate —
the site-selection teams at the dozens of manufacturers, biotech companies and
aerospace concerns, among others, that announced Georgia locations for their
next strategic capital investment projects. These include Kubota Industrial
Equipment ($73-million, 522,000-sq.-ft./48,500-sq.-m. plant in Jefferson for
tractor production), Engineered Floors, LLC ($450-million, 2,000-job facilities
in Whitfield and Murray Counties) and Koch Foods ($49 million, 750-job food
processing facility in Hamilton).Photo courtesy of Georgia Dept. of Economic Development
In early 2012,
Caterpillar announced a site near Athens as the location for a construction
equipment plant that will employ 1,400 by 2020. Baxter International broke
ground in August 2012 on a $1-billion complex near Covington that will begin
producing biomedical treatments in 2018. And Porsche broke ground on its
$100-million US headquarters at a former Ford Motor Co. site adjacent to
Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in November 2012. All of these
projects have been covered in these pages, but they bear mention here in the
context of this ranking. These companies had plenty of location options,
especially in the business-friendly Southeast. They chose Georgia.
Gov. Nathan Deal gives
credit to his economic development staff and that of the Department of Economic
Development. “My staff in the governor’s office have a good and close
relationship with the economic development team — we’re probably more hands-on
than people might think,” says the governor of the role his office plays in
attracting capital investment.
As this issue went to
press, Chris Carr was preparing to assume the role of Commissioner of the
Department of Economic Development, which was vacated recently by Chris
Cummiskey. Carr most recently served as chief of staff to US Senator Johnny
Isakson.
What Do Businesses Need?
Nathan Deal became
Georgia’s 82nd governor in January 2011.
“One of the first
things I did was put in place the Competitiveness Initiative, which was an
effort to ask the question all over the state of Georgia, ‘What do you think
would make your region more competitive and bring more jobs?’” says Deal.
Meetings of top business leaders were held in 12 regions around the state in
2011. The effort resulted in a comprehensive report issued in January 2012 that
set economic development goals based on input gathered in the meetings. To
enhance Georgia’s business climate, the governor proposed several legislative
changes to the state’s statutory incentives, including sales and use tax
exemptions on energy used in manufacturing and for construction materials for
competitive projects. Deal also proposed a modernization of Georgia’s job tax
credit structure.
In April 2012, the
governor signed tax reform legislation that reduces the state’s marriage
penalty tax and eliminates the sales tax on energy used in manufacturing — need
for the latter was derived directly from input gleaned in the Competitiveness
Initiative. The governor will institute another such initiative in the future
to gain more current insights into the business climate requirements of
Georgia’s businesses. But there’s more to his strategy than that.
“We have to be willing
to be fluid and to adjust policies to meet the needs of the times, and that’s
one of the difficulties that government sometimes has — that it cannot react
quickly enough or be flexible enough to adapt to changing conditions,” says
Deal. “If you’re stuck in a mold in which there isn’t a willingness to address
new issues or an inability to address new issues, you’ll get left behind. We
have put in a very fluid but also very competent system of reviewing proposals
for economic growth, and it has served us well. That’s the model that’s working
for us.”
Inherent Strengths:
Logistics, Power
Another priority
moving forward is to build on Georgia’s inherent economic development
strengths, which have served the state well. Logistics is a case in point.
“You can reach 80
percent of the United States market from Georgia within a two-day truck drive
or a two-hour flight out of Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport,”
says Deal. “We are strategically located and have the most extensive rail network
in the Southeast with two Class 1 railroads and 25 short-line providers, a
well-developed road system with five major Interstates, 20,000 miles of federal
and state highways and the busiest airport in the world. So we have a lot going
for us logistically, including the ports. The Port of Savannah is a huge part
of our logistics and a main focus in terms of making sure it can accommodate
the post-Panamax vessels when they come through the enlarged Panama Canal in
mid-2015.”
Another part of
Georgia’s business climate allure, says Deal, is its power supply and relative
affordability. “Statistically, our electrical prices are about 7 percent lower
than the national average. And we give companies a choice of energy providers,”
says the governor. “We have energy competition here, whereas in many states
it’s monopolistic — you’re allocated power by whoever has jurisdiction in your
area. Being able to shop for energy here helps keep those prices down.”
Fast-Track Industry
Sectors
Industries that are
helping drive Georgia’s economy — and can do so thanks to its business climate
— are aerospace, automotive and agribusiness. The significance of the
$1-billion, 2.2-million-sq.-ft. (204,380-sq.-m.) Kia plant in West Point, which
opened in February 2010, cannot be overstated, says Gov. Deal, particularly as
a magnet for suppliers to that plant and others in the Southeast. “The
suppliers can be a larger jobs supplier than the original plant was, which is a
good thing,” he points out “The same is
true of heavy equipment manufacturers, such as Mitsubishi and JCB here in
Georgia, including the new Caterpillar plant in the Athens area. Caterpillar,
which moved a plant here from Japan, has been very helpful in encouraging its
suppliers to also move to Georgia. We’re beginning to see them do just that.
“It’s great to have
industries with a really big presence in the state, but it’s better if you have
a diversified economy that is based on many types of manufacturers,” says Deal.
“That’s what we have. We are seeing a return of what has traditionally been the
umbrella arena of textiles, the biggest of which was the carpet industry but is
now more appropriately referred to as the flooring industry. We’re seeing
announcements from Mohawk and Engineered Floors. And we’ve recently had an
announcement from an Indian textile company, Shrivallabh Pittie Group, about
their new manufacturing plant [$70 million; 250 jobs] near Sylvania in Screven
County.
“Things are looking
very bright in terms of growth in our economy and a diversified job base.”
Agriculture is still the chief economic driver in Georgia, Deal
relates, “and it’s becoming more diversified. It’s not just exporting peanuts,
pecans and cotton anymore.” Environmental regulations in the European Union are
driving demand for pelletized commodities, such as pine trees, as biomass
energy sources. At press time, Decatur, Ill.-based agribusiness giant Archer
Daniels Midland was reportedly seeking a new headquarters and IT center
location, and Atlanta was believed to be on the short list. Were that
investment to come to pass, it would diversify the state’s Ag industry
significantly.
“Our
economic development people have their ears to the ground in terms of companies
seeking to relocate,” says the governor. “We are seeing a significant
continuation of relocation that started many years ago from the Rust Belt to
the Southeast. That has accelerated, and there are reasons for that. Many
states in this economy have resorted to raising taxes at the state level, for
example, and the result is driving businesses out of their states. We’re
saying, ‘Come to Georgia.’ ”
Source:
Site Selection Magazine, November 2013, Cover Story, siteselection.com by MARK AREND
mark.arend @siteselection.com
mark.arend @siteselection.com
Comments:
The companies cited in
the article above are largely manufacturing operations moving to rural
counties. This is exactly the kind of
growth Georgia needs. Google siteselection.com to see the original article with tables to get the full picture.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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