The $40.1 billion regional GDP for 2017 is about a 5 percent increase over the previous year, and growth in manufacturing was responsible for about 36 percent of that year-over-year growth, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).
“The Lehigh Valley is unique among major metropolitan areas in the United States in that manufacturing is driving such a large percentage of its growth,” said Don Cunningham, President & CEO of the Lehigh Valley Economic Development Corporation (LVEDC). “Manufacturing is clearly alive and well in the Lehigh Valley, and our regional GDP is the largest it’s ever been, far surpassing even the days of Bethlehem Steel.”
Manufacturing the fastest-growing sector
Manufacturing makes up $7.4 billion – or 18.4 percent – of the Lehigh Valley’s overall $40.1 billion GDP. That’s a much higher percentage than its share of the national economy. Manufacturing is 11.6 percent of the U.S. economy, according to the BEA.
Manufacturing was also the fastest-growing economic sector for 2017 in terms of economic output. Its $7.4 billion GDP was an increase of $700 million (10.4 percent) compared to 2016. No other sector had a larger year-over-year percentage increase.
That means manufacturing in the Lehigh Valley grew at a faster pace than transportation and warehousing, which saw the second-largest year-over-year jump. That sector, with a $2.1 billion GDP, grew at a rate of 8.8 percent compared to 2016.
“Contrary to the misnomer that big box warehousing and fulfillment centers are driving growth in the Lehigh Valley economy, manufacturing far surpasses it in economic output and growth,” Cunningham said. “That’s a testament to both the strength of manufacturing in the Lehigh Valley, and the balanced and diversified makeup of the overall economy.”
Manufacturing remains the Lehigh Valley’s second-largest sector. The largest is finance, insurance and real estate, which makes up $7.6 billion of the regional economy. Manufacturing fell only $200 million behind it in 2017, compared to a gap of $900 million the previous year.
Lehigh Valley ranks 64th in the U.S.
Gross domestic product is a measurement of a region’s economic output. The Lehigh Valley’s $40.1 billion figure accounts for private sector industry and does not include government spending. If that were included, the figure would rise to $43.8 billion.
The Lehigh Valley economy now ranks 64th out of the 382 largest metropolitan areas in the United States, which is one spot higher than last year. The BEA released the new data on Sept. 18, and 2017 is the most recent year for which measurable GDP data is available.
“The Lehigh Valley is the nation’s 69th largest major metropolitan area by population but the country’s 64th largest economy, so we continue to swing well above our weight class in economic output," Cunningham said.
The Lehigh Valley private sector GDP remains larger than that of Vermont ($27.4 billion) and Wyoming ($34 billion), as well as 112 other countries in the world. If the Lehigh Valley were a country, it would be the 88th largest economy in the world in terms of economic output.
Economic growth across many sectors
Nearly each of the economic sectors of the Lehigh Valley economy saw year-over-year GDP growth in 2017, with the exception of the information sector, which saw a slight drop from $2 billion to $1.9 billion. The sector-by-sector breakdown can be found below:
· Finance, Insurance and Real Estate ($7.6 billion, +4.26% year-over-year)
· Manufacturing ($7.4 billion, +10.4%)
· Education, Health Care and Social Assistance ($5.5 billion, +4.63%)
· Professional Services ($5.2 billion, +2.52%)
· Retail ($2.4 billion, +1.4%)
· Transportation and Warehousing ($2.1 billion, 8.8%)
· Information ($1.9 billion, -3.73%)
· Arts, Entertainment, Accommodation ($1.7 billion, +1.7 percent)
These GDP figures derive from the BEA and were analyzed and presented by George Lewis, LVEDC Director of Research and Analysis. GDP rankings of other countries come from the World Bank. The BEA adjusts its figures to account for new information and projections, so numbers that have been reported for previous years may have been changed or adjusted over time.
About LVEDC
The mission of LVEDC is to market the economic assets of the Lehigh Valley and to serve as a regional shared services and resource center to help businesses to come, grow, and start here. Our vision is of a Lehigh Valley with a diverse economic base in our cities and countries that enable businesses to come here, start here, and flourish here in order to create jobs and opportunities for all of our residents. Our priorities are marketing economic assets, coordinating a prepared workforce, focusing on city and urban development, serving as a shared services center, providing access to capital, and building our resources and engaging stakeholders.
Blogger's Analysis: I'm a little confused. According to this news release, the Lehigh Valley's GDP has jumped five percent over the previous year, and is now $40.1 billion. But when I add the sector-by-sector breakdown, I come up with only $33.8 billion GDP. So either someone's math is wrong, or one or more sectors are missing.
Also, despite the manufacturing boast, it only makes up 22% of the economy.
Retail has only risen 1.4%. That's hardly a sign that consumers have money in their pockets, or that Trump's temporary tax cuts has spurred spending.
The increase in transportation and warehousing is a bad sign for our failing infrastructure. The Lehigh Valley knows truck traffic is going to double, yet still has failed to take a regional approach to combat this problem.
Arts and entertainment is only up 1.7? Is this supposed to be a good thing, or a warning sign?
The drop in information is something you see every time you open up a newspaper. The problem is not fake news. the problem is no news at all, a very troubling sign in a democracy.
We listed the eight largest sectors in our story, but there are a few other sectors that make up a smaller portion of the GDP (utilities, construction, wholesale trade) that we did not include. However, if you’d like to see the specific breakdown, you can visit the BEA.govwebsite, go to the interactive data section, then search for GDP by metro, then pull up the 2017 numbers.
You can see in the screenshot below where the $40.1 billion (for private industry) comes from:
(You may also see some sectors are listed as “(D),” meaning “Did not report.” That means the BEA did not report specific amounts from them, either because of business confidentiality reasons, or because they deemed them too small to specifically report, or for some other reason. We have no control over that, obviously, but GDP from those sectors are still rolled into the $40.1 billion number.)
Manufacturing’s $7.4 billion GDP makes up 18% of the overall $40.1 billion GDP, which may not sound like much on the surface, but is actually quite high compared to most regions. For comparison purposes, manufacturing only makes up 11.6% of the overall U.S. economy.
Additionally, one of the unique factors of the Lehigh Valley economy is how unusually balanced and multifaceted it is. Many regions have one sector that makes up the vast majority of its economy, and then the other sectors are significantly smaller. By comparison, the Lehigh Valley’s top two sectors (finance and manufacturing) are very close to each other ($7.6B and $7.4B), as are its next two (education and professional services, at $5.5 billion and $5.2 billion, respectively). We view this as a strength for our economy, all our eggs are not in one basket; we are not overly dependent on one industry, and so if there is a decline in one sector, it will be partially offset by strength in the others.
Insiders telling insiders how great they all are. Cunningham is like a Iannelli with hair.
ReplyDeletePeople and companies are spending money and are optimistic about the economy again. Gee, I wonder why...
ReplyDeleteWhen did New Jersey become part of LVEDCs service area? This is the MSA (Lehigh, Northampton, Carbon & Warren, NJ). This is not a useful analysis, just regurgitation.
ReplyDeleteThe economy has at least partially recovered... 10 years in the making. No one person, president or otherwise can take credit.
ReplyDeleteEducation, Health Care and Social Assistance ($5.5 billion, +4.63%)
ReplyDeleteThese are clearly expenditures yet they are counted as production. This kind of bookkeeping makes any analysis of these numbers a fool's errand.
To this point: "the problem is no news at all, a very troubling sign in a democracy."
If a tree falls in the forest and there is nobody there to hear it, does it make a sound? No.
If it did than NiSource and Columbia Gas would get the same amount of press and public scrutiny as the Tsarnaev brothers.
"The problem is not fake news"
ReplyDeleteNo, not here... here the problem is fake bookkeeping.
Thank you president Trump! MAGA!
ReplyDeleteHow is this organization funded? How much tax money pays these people?
ReplyDeleteMore bullshit from the kings of Bullshit!
ReplyDeleteHow is this organization funded?
ReplyDeleteMainly from a portion of the hotel tax for tourism collected in Lehigh and Northampton County.
Obama, baby. He took the ball to the goal line, Trump just walked it onto the end zone.
ReplyDeleteGiven the amount of money they spend on their staff and their trips and perks. They should show real performance numbers and be audited by county auditors.
ReplyDeleteBernie - do you have a man crush on DC too?
ReplyDelete