Greater Washington’s Innovation Economy at a Crossroads · 2019-02-07 · 1 Economic and...

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Greater Washington’s Innovation Economy at a CrossroadsLessons from today’s challenges and Amazon HQ2

Amy Liu, Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program | @amy_liuw

NAIOP Northern Virginia Annual Forecast Luncheon| February 7, 2019

1

Economic and

demographic

changes within

Greater

Washington

2

Why place

matters to the

regional

economy

3

HQ2’s

implications

and what

leaders in the

region should

do

1

The state of

Greater

DMV’s

innovation

economy

2

Why place

matters to

the regional

economy

3

Implications

of HQ2 and

beyond

1 2 3

Why place

matters to

the regional

economy

The state of

Greater

DMV’s

innovation

economy

Implications

of HQ2 and

beyond

Every region should pursue three goals 1 2 3

Median wage

GROWTH INCLUSIONPROSPERITY

Jobs

Entrepreneurship

ProductivityStandard of Living

Average wage

Employment rate

Relative poverty rate

Output

76th2011-2016

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

GROWTH

1 2 3Every region should pursue three goals

Jobs

EntrepreneurshipOutput

76th2011-2016

91st2011-2016

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

GROWTH PROSPERITY

1 2 3

Jobs

Entrepreneurship

ProductivityStandard of Living

Average wage

Output

Every region should pursue three goals

76th2011-2016

91st2011-2016

94th2011-2016

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

GROWTH PROSPERITY INCLUSION

1 2 3

Median wageJobs

Entrepreneurship

ProductivityStandard of Living

Average wage

Employment rate

Relative poverty rate

Output

Every region should pursue three goals

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

PROSPERITY

95

100

105

110

115

120

Greater DMV

United States

2011 2013 2016

1 2 3

96thon productivity per capita growth,

2011 - 2016

Greater DMV is trailing the nation on prosperity and inclusion

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

PROSPERITY INCLUSION

95

100

105

110

115

120

Greater DMV

United States

90

92

94

96

98

100

102

104

Greater DMV

United States

2011 2013 2016 2011 2013 2016

93rdon median earnings growth,

2011 - 2016

1 2 3

96thon productivity per capita growth,

2011 - 2016

Greater DMV is trailing the nation on prosperity and inclusion

-0.4%

-0.3%

-0.2%

-0.1%

0.1%

0.2%

0.3%

0.4%

0.5%

Change in share of national digital services jobs

Top 100 metros, 2015-2017

San Francisco, CA

Seattle, WA

San Jose, CA

Los Angeles, CA

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria

The DMV registered the

largest decline in tech share

Source: Brookings, “Tech is (still) concentrating in the Bay Area,” December 2018

The region is adding tech jobs but losing market share 1 2 3

Source: Brookings, “America’s advanced industries: New trends” August 2016

The advanced industry sector is experiencing job growth.

The region’s advanced industries have lackluster growth 1 2 3

Share of all advanced industries jobs, 2015

Computer Systems

Design

Management and Scientific

Consulting

Architectural and

Engineering

Scientific Research and

Development

Data Processing and

Hosting

Other jobs

40%

22%

12%

11%

3% 13%

Annual average change in

advanced industry jobs

(2013-2015)

+0.9%

out of 100 largest metro

areas

65th

Source: Brookings analysis, 2015

The advanced industry sector is experiencing job growth.

of advanced industries revenue in Greater DMV

comes from federal sources

64%

1 2 3The region’s advanced industries have lackluster growth

Source: Brookings, “Digitalization and the American workforce,” November 2017

2002 2016Low Medium High

Share of U.S. employment by digital skill level

56%

40%

5%

30%

48%

23%

Jobs across all sectors are rapidly digitalizing 1 2 3

Low Medium

Greater DMV demographics by race, 2018

25%45% 16% 11% 3%

BlackWhite Hispanic Asian Other

Meanwhile, the workforce is diversifying 1 2 3

Source: Brookings analysis of EMSI data, January 2019

Greater DMV demographics by race, 2018

25%45% 16% 11% 3%

BlackWhite Hispanic Asian Other

Percent Growth 2013 to 2018

6%

0%

16%15%

14%

Meanwhile, the workforce is diversifying 1 2 3

Source: Brookings analysis of EMSI data, January 2019

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

Stark racial disparities in Greater DMV persist 1 2 3

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

2010 2012 2014 2016

Employment rate2010-2016

75%

80%

White

Black

Hispanic

Source: Brookings, “Metro Monitor,” 2018

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

$60

$70

2010 2012 2014 2016

Hispanic

Black

White$60K

$40K

$30K

Median wages2010-2016, thousands

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

2010 2012 2014 2016

Employment rate2010-2016

75%

80%

White

Black

Hispanic

1 2 3Stark racial disparities in Greater DMV persist

Black employment

Source: Brookings, “Black and Hispanic underrepresentation in tech: it’s time to change the equation,” 2018

23.9%24.5%

15.8%

19.4%

1 2 3

+ 3.6percentage pt.

increase in tech

employment share

Blacks and Hispanics are underrepresented in tech jobs

2010 2016 2010 2016

All occupations

Tech occupations

Hispanic employment

Source: Brookings, “Black and Hispanic underrepresentation in tech: it’s time to change the equation,” 2018

All occupations

Tech occupations

2010 2016 2010 2016

14.1%15.3%

4.4% 5.5%

Blacks and Hispanics are underrepresented in tech jobs 1 2 3

+ 1.1percentage pt.

increase in tech

employment share

2 31

Why place

matters to

the regional

economy

The state of

Greater

DMV’s

innovation

economy

Implications

of HQ2 and

beyond

Market demand for place has shifted over time 2 31

LARGE

COMPANIES

HOSPITALS

UNIVERSITIES

Spin-offs

Small firms

Entrepreneurs

INTERMEDIARIES

R&D Labs

Today’s innovation economy requires collaboration… 2 31

Increase in well-educated young adult population (age 25-34), 2000 to 2010

19%

37%

51 largest metro areas

Neighborhoods within 3 miles of central business district

Source: City Observatory, “Where are young and restless moving?”, 2016

…and skilled workers, who are moving to urban areas 2 31

1 2 3Companies are moving to be near other firms & talented people

31 2

Why place

matters to

the regional

economy

The state of

Greater

DMV’s

innovation

economy

Implications

of HQ2 and

beyond

TECHNICAL

TALENT

“Include information

on your K-12

education programs

related to computer

science.”

“Sidewalks, bike lanes,

trams, metro, bus, light rail,

train…”

“…energy-efficient lighting…

as well as public plazas and

pockets of green space.”

SUSTAINABLE

PLACEMAKING

“Proximity to an international

airport and major highways …

optimal fiber connectivity is

paramount.”

GLOBALLY

CONNECTED

INFRASTRUCTURE

“This project

requires … the

presence and

support of a diverse

population.”

DIVERSITY

Amazon selected Greater DMV for its regional assets 1 2 3

Direct

employment

Indirect employment

1high-tech job creates up to

5additional jobs in a region,

including lawyers, teachers, nurses, waiters, and carpenters

Source: Enrico Moretti, “The New Geography of Jobs,” 2012

High-tech jobs create significant spillover benefits for a region 1 2 3

Seattle and other fast-growing tech hubs are cautionary tales 1 2 3

1 2 3Five actions the Greater DMV region could undertake

Set goals to help this region lead on inclusive innovation 1 2 3

Minneapolis - Saint Paul

Regional dashboard

Solidify strengths in key technologies and sectors 1 2 3

Build a local digital skills talent pipeline 1 2 3

Work regionally to expand housing and transportation choice 1 2 3

Walkable

suburban

district

Waterfront

Arts & creative

district

Innovation

district

Downtown

Create a regional network of accessible, vibrant economic districts 1 2 3

Five actions the Greater DMV region could undertake

• Set goals to help this region lead on inclusive innovation

• Solidify strengths in key technologies and sectors

• Build a local digital skills talent pipeline

• Work regionally to expand housing and transportation choice

• Create a regional network of accessible, vibrant economic districts

1 2 3

Greater Washington’s Innovation Economy at a CrossroadsLessons from today’s challenges and Amazon HQ2

Amy Liu, Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program | @amy_liuw

NAIOP Northern Virginia Annual Forecast Luncheon| February 7, 2019

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