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February,1979
SOUTH CENTRAL
ALASKA'S ECONOMY AND
POPULATION, 1965 • 2025:
A Base Study and Projections
A REPORT OF THE ECONOMICS TASK FORCE
Prepared by University of Alaska
Institute of Social and Economic Research
SOUTH CENTRAL
ALASKA WATER
RESOURCES
STUDY
(level 8)
ALASKA
~WATER STUDY
COMMITIEE
Southcentral Alaska's Economy and
Population, 1965-2025: A Base
Study and Projection
Report of the Economics Task Force
Southcentral Alaska Water Resources Study (Level B)
to the
Alaska Water Study Committee
prepared by
Michael J. Scott
Assistant Professor of Economics
and
Staff, Institute of Social and Economic Research
University of Alaska
Anchorage Fairbanks Juneau
January 31, 1979
Alaska Water Study Committee
SOUTHCENTRAL WATER RESOURCES STUDY (Level B)
P.O. Box 3276 DT
Anchorage, Alaska 99 510
February 2, 1979
Memorandum
To: Frank J. Urabeck, Director, Southcentral Alaska Water Resources
Study
From: E. Allen Robinson, Chairman, Economic Task Force ~
Subject: Economic Task Force Final Report
On behalf of the Economic Task Force I am pleased to submit to you our final
report which is intended to provide the basis for analyzing and projecting
future use of water and related land resources in Southcentral Alaska. This
report, reflecting the joint effort of the Task Force, was prepared by
Michael J. Scott, Assistant Profes~or of Economics, and other staff of the
Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska.
Your attention is called to the Introduction, particularly some of the con-
cerns expressed there relative to the use of the economic data and to the
need for periodic updating of regional and subregional proj~ctions in light
of new developments. ,
Numerous key economic decisions now pending, some to be made external to
Alaska, will affect future employment, incomes, and population. Therefore,
I recommend that the Task Force continue to meet at least annually to review
events as they might relate to the regional economic forecasts prepared for
the Level B study. An important event will be the 1980 decennial Census.
Another will be when the proposed natural gas pipeline is actually started.
The necessity for a periodic update is underlined by the fact that many agencies
are keying their activities and program planning to the Level B data.
cc:
Economic Task Force ARLI.S
Alaska Resources
r~rv & Information Services
·~diorage. Alaska
i:i .. ·.··: -;: .. ·
Introduction
This report is a jo:int effort of several econoin:ists, planners, and
agency experts who were members of the Economics Task Force of the South-
central.Alaska Water Resources Study (Level B) being conducted by the
Alaska Water Study Committee. This final report of the Economics Task
Force is the result of numerous meetings held in Anchorage over the past
year and one-half. As the attached list·of members indicates, the Task
Force has been composed of representatives of seven Federal agencies,
eight state agencies, four local governments (one municipality and three
boroughs), and four Native corporations.
The Task Force was charged with producing an economic base study and
set of projections for the three study subregions--Cook Inlet, Kodiak-
Shelikof, and the Gulf of Alaska. Initially, two projections were done,
one corresponding to high economic development and one corresponding to
low economic development. Population and employment were projected for
these scenarios for each of the·subregions in five-yea~ intervals from
1975 to 2025 in this report. Supplementary data are available at .a more
aggregated level-~for Anchorage and the remainder of Southcentral--to
the year 2000. A third, or intermediate case was done abqut six months
after the first two and appears in an addendum to this volume.
The projections reported relied on two long-run econometric models
devised by economists at the University of Alaska Institute of Social and
Economic Research (ISER) and MIT-Harvard Joint.Center for Urban Studies.
Funding was originally provided by the National Science Foundation for
ISER's Man :in the Arctic Program (MAP). The two specific models used
here are modifications of the Alaska state and regional models developed
under .that program. The models produced estimates of gross output,
employment, income, and population for the years 1975-2000. Population
and employment were disaggregated and extrapolated to the year 2025 by
ISER researchers under Economics Task Force direction, and using a
methodology developed jointly by the Task Force and ISER and described
in Chapter 2 of the study.
There are various strengths and limitations to using the models and
methodology outlined in the report. Because of restrictions imposed by
the. timetable of the study, it was. necessary to do the estimates with
:regional and statewide econometric models which were not matched to each
6ther because only the state model had been updated through 1976. Time
did not permit a complete update, so a series of patching routines were
:used to force plausible results. If the reestimate of these results is
to b.e,coine a routine event, art updated regional model is now available'
to run side by side with the state model, both incorporating 1976 data.
It will still be necessary to do a careful review of the results even
with later vers.ions of the models, however, at least partly because the
models were built with impact analysis rather than forecasting in mind •
. ,_
iii
The Task Force has found that critical review and modification of assump-
tions and the models themselves is an essential part of the projection
process. For example, it was necessary to revise the projections late
in the study process when Alaska Petrochemical Corporation (Alpetco)
decided to locate their petrochemical facility at Valdez rather than at
Kenai, as had originally been anticipated.
Because many political decisions and business decisions made out-
side of Alaska will undoubtedly affect employment, incomes, and popula-
tion in the future, the Task Force recommends that it meet ~t least once
a year hereafter to review these developments. One important development
occurring in a little over one year is the 1980 decennial Census which will
provide a benchmark for new projections. The proposed Northwest natural
gas pipeline may or may not be constructed. These and other factors will
require a continued update. Because many Federal and state agencies will
be using these projections in their studies and operations, it is obvi-
ously important that they be restudied annually or as major events require.
The population projection for the year 2000 in the intermediate sce-
nario for the total Southcentral region is 543,200. The four subregions
are then projected to have 424,900 in Anchorage (the municipality), 78,400
in Other Cook Inlet, 14,600 in the Gulf of Alaska, and 25,300 in Kodiak-
Shelikof. If transportation facilities are improved in the coming years
(rail, bus, or car) between Anchorage and the Matanuska-Susitna Valley,
it is possible that population increases in Anchorage will be somewhat
lower and those in Other Cook Inlet will be correspondingly higher. The
report concludes that growth in the Southcentral region is likely to be
substantial in any of the cas.es, with low case year 2000 population equal
to 425 thousand and 2025 population equal to 501 thousand (compared to
about 230 thousand in 1975), and high case year 2000 and 2025 population
equal to 680 thousand and 963 thousand, respectively. These projections
were intended to be used ·as control totals for projections of local and
regional population in the planning process. The user should not become
too dep~ndent upon the specific projections, however, since the assump-
tions which went into developing these numbers are at least as important
. as the numbers themselves. It should also be kept in mind that the art
of economic projection is analogous to shooting at a moving target from
a moving platform in a dense fog--one is happy to be somewhere near the
mark. Pl,anners and others using these numbe:r:s should therefore be alert
for opportunities to do contingency planning rather than plan for only
one set of possible futures. Users of this report will doubtless have
the benefit of some additional hindsight with which to judge the plausi-
bility of these projections. As this data becomes available, it.should
be incorporated, posthaste, into the planning process.
• ------------------------------~ ------------------
Michael J. Scott
Assistant Professor of Economics
Principal Investigator, ISER
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Task Force Participants
Federal
E. Allen Robinson, Chairman
Housing and Urban Development
Robert Cross/Don Shira
Alaska Power Administration
John Hopkins/Neil Michaelson
Bureau of Land Management
Clyde Stewart
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture
Donald Blasko
U.S. Bureau on Mines
Tom Warren
Dept. of Interior
Alaska Outer Continental Shelf
Office
Charles Welling/Ken Steele
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Sterling Powell/Paul Feglestad
Soil Conservation Services
Gary Hickman/Gary Stackhouse
U.S. Fish and Wildlffe Service
State
Ed Busch
AK Community and Regional Affairs
Cal.vin Dauel/Calvin Hanson
· Alaska Dept. of Labor
Michael Scott
University of Alaska
Institute of Social and
Economic Resources
Vince Wright
AK Dept. of Revenue
Nat Goodhue/Hope Reed
AK Dept. of National Resources,
Div. of Parks
Charlette Chastain/Glenn Akins
Environmental Conservation
Jim Wiedeman/Fred Muller
AK Commerce and Economic Development
Bruce Baker
Office of the Governor
Div. of Policy Development and Planning
Brent Petrie/Greg Doggett
AK Div. of Land and Water Resources
Edward L. Phillips
AK Dept. of Natural Resources
Div. of Minerals and Energy Management
Local
Barbara t~ithers
Municipality of Anchorage
Michael Brogan
Kenai Borough
Harry Milligan
Kodiak Borough
David Simpson
Mat-Su Borough
Native
Gene Sundberg
KONIAG, Inc.
Kirk McGee
Cook Inlet, Region Inc.
Wilson Justin
AHTNA, Inc.
Carl A. Propes, Jr.
Chugach Natives Inc.
Other
Frank J. Urabeck
Director, Management Team
Chuck Lone !~ol f
AK Federation of Natives, Management Team
Dan WilKerson
DEC/State Representive, Management Team
Sue Reisinger
Management Team
v
Table o£ Contents
Memorandum of Transmittal ••
Introduction
List of Task Force Participants
Table of Contents
List of Tables •
List of Figures
Executive Summary
·· .. ···.
Chapter 1: Southcentral Alaska's Economy, 1965-1975.
-Growth of Southcentral Economy •• · ••
-Distribution of Economic Growth Among Industries
and Areas, Southcentral Region
• Basic Industries ••
• Support Sectors
-Comparison of Growth in the 3 Study Regions •
-Age-Sex Distribution of the Population
-Summary, 1965 to 1975
Chapter 2: Methodology and Data Used in Projecting
Southcentral Alaska's Economy, 1975-2025
-The Econometric Models ••
• The State Model
• The Regional Model .•
• Strengths and Limitations
.. ·.
-Assumptions Used to Produce Economic and Population
Projections, 1975~2000 ••
• Agriculture
• Forestry
• Fisheries ••
• Mining, Including Oil and Gas
• Food Manufacturing •
• Lumber and Wood Products Manufacturing •
• Pulp and Paper Manufacturing ••
• Other Manufacturing
• Construction
• Federal Government •
• State Government
• Local Government
• Miscellaneous Assumptions
'·: .. :··
...
Page
i
ii
iv
v
viii
xii
xiii
1
3
14
14
22
31
-37
44
45
46
46
49
53.
57
58
59
59
60
62
63
63
64
65
66
66
67
68
vi
Table of Contents (continued)
-Methodology Used to Disaggregate Regional Control
Totals for the 3 Subregions
• High Case ••
• Low Case
-Assumptions Used to Estimate Employment and
Population, 2000 to 2025 •
Chapter 3: Projection Results for Southcentral Alaska,
1975-2025 •
Growth to 2000
• Output •
• Employment •
• Income •
• Population •
Distribution of Growth Among Industries .
-Subregional Economic and Population Growth, 1975-2000
• High Case ••
··Low Case
-Post-2000 Results
Summary •
Addendum:, Intermediate Case Projections
A. Methodology and Data Uqed in Intermediate Case •
Intermediate Case
and Population
Assumptions Used to Produce Economic
Projections, 1975-2000.
• Agriculture.
• Forestry
• Fisheries ••
• Mining, Including Oil and Gas
• Food Manufacturing •
• Lumber and Wood Products Manufacturing •
• Pulp and Paper Manufacturing
• Other Manufacturing
• Construction ...
• Federal Government •
• State Government
• Local Government
• Miscellaneous Assumptions
Page
69
70
72
73
76
76
77
79
79
82
82
86
86
88
89
94
AD-1
AD-1
AD-1
AD-2
AD-2
AD-3
AD-3
AD-4
AD-4
AD-S
AD-5
AD-6
AD-6
AD-7
AD-7
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--·-----c
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vii
Table of Contents (continued)
-Intermediate Case Methodology Used to Disaggregate
Regional Control Totals for the Three Subregions •
Assumptions Used to Estimate Employment and
Population in the Intermediate Case, 2000-2025
B. In.termediate Case Projection Results for
Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2025
-Growth to 2000 ••
• Output .
• Employment •
• Income •
• Population • .
-Distribution of Growth Among ~ndustries •
-Subregional Economic and Population Growth,
1975 to 2000, Intermediate Case ••
-Post-2000 Results, Intermediate Casef
-Sensitivity Test: Northwest Gas Pipeline.
Appendices .
A. Historical Data on Southcentral Alaska's Economy
B. Selected Regional Model Inputs and Outputs.
References •
AD-8
AD-10
AD-13.
AD-13
AD-13
AD-15
AD-15
AD-18
AD-18
AD-21
AD-23
AD-26
A-1
B-1
R-1
viii
• List of Tables
Number Table
Executive Summary:
A. Southcentral Water Study High Case Projections XXV
B. Southcentral Water Study Intermediate
c.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Case Projections
Southcentral Water Study Low Case Projections.
Text:
Comparison of the Growth in Constant Dollar Real
Output·: Southcentral Alaska, Alaska, and the
Uni~ed States, 1965-1975
Civilian Nonagricultural Wage and Salary Employment
·and Seasonality Coefficients: Southcentral Alaska
and State of Alaska~ 1965-1975
State Agricultural Employment and Southcentral
Fisheries Employment and Measures of
Seasonality, 1965-1975
Rea1Persona1 Income and Per Capita Income:
Southcehtral Alaska, Alaska, and the United
States, 1965-1975 •• ••
Population Growth:. Southcentral Region and
Alaska, 1965-1975 ••
Anchorage and U.S. Consumer Price Index, Percentage
Change, and Difference in Percentage Change,
1965-1975 ••
Annual.-Percent fncrease in :RearGross oU.Fpl..it~ ·· -
Southcentral Region and State, 1965-1975
xxvii
xxix
5
6
7
10
11
13
15
8. Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries Output Statistics,
Southcentral Alaska, 1965-1975 21
-------------f:-----Selected Measures of Growth, Cook Inlet Subregion-;----------------c-
1965-1975 •• •• 32
Number
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
ix
List of Tables (continued)
Table
Selected Measures of Growth, Gulf of Alaska
Subregion, 1965-1975
Selected Measures of Growth, Kodiak-Shelikof
Subregion, 1965-1975
Age-Sex Distribution of the Resident Population,
Southcentral Alaska, 1970
Anchorage Census Division Age Distribution of Non-
Military ~ase Population
Kenai-Cook Inlet and Seward Census Divisions: Age
Distribution of the Population, 1970 and 1976
Valdez-Chitina-Whittier Census Division: Age
Distribution of the Population, 1975
(Valdez only), and 1970
Growth of Constant Dollar (Real) Output: Anchorage,
Other Southcentral, and Southcentral Alaska,
1975-2000 •• .~
Civilian Employment in Anchorage, Other Southcentral,
and Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
Real Wage and Salary and Proprietor Income Earned
Plus Transfers, and Per Capita Income: Anchorage,
Other Southcentral, and Southcentral Alaska,
197 5-2ooo· ••
Population Growth: Southcentral Region, 1975-2000
Projected Civilian Employment Growth by Industry
Group, Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
Average Annual Growth in Population·and Civilian
~ Employment, by Subregion, 1975-2000
Southcentral Water Study High Case Projections
(HIGHSC3) •.
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38
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41 c
43
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78
80
0
i
81
83 q
84 I
0
I
87
90
Southcentral Water Study Low Case Projections I
----(-l.0WSG6~-.-.-~-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-9-2---_:_-~~~-cj
I
c
Number
AD.l
AD.2
AD.4
AD.5
AD.6
AD.7
AD.8
A.l
A.2
X
List of Tables (continued)
Table
Addendum:
Growth of Constant Dollar (Real) Output:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and
Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000 ••
Civilian Employment in Anchorage, Other
Southcentral, anp Southcentral Alaska,
1975-2000 • • • •
Real Wage and Salary and Proprietor Income
Earned Plus Transfers, and Per Capita.Income:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and Southcentral
Alaska, 1975-2000 ••
Population.Growth: Southcentral Region, 1975-2000.
Projected Civilian Employment Growth by Industry
Group, Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
Average Annual Growth in Population and Civilian
Employment, by Subregion, 1975-2000.
Southcentral Water St~dy Intermediate Case
Projections (INTSClO) ••
Sensitivity of the Intermediate Case South-
central Economy to the Elimination of the
Northwest Alaska Natural Gas Pipeline ••
Appendix:
Gross Pro~uct, in Millions of 1958 Dollars:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, Southcentral,
and State of Alaska
Nonagricultural Wage and Salary Employment by
Industry: Study Subregion, Southcentral Alaska,
and State ••
Page·
AD-14
AD-16
AD-17
AD-19
AD-20
AD-22
AD-24·
AD-27
A-1
A-5
------------------------------c---A.3 Wages and Salaries by Place or-WOfK and-Personal _______ _
Income by Place of Residence, 1965-1975 A-10
Number
A.4
. A.5
A.6
xi
List of Tables (continued)
Table
Estimated July 1 Resident Population, Study Subregions,
Southcentral Alaska, and State, 1965-1975 A-ll
Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage and Clerical
Worker Families of Two or More Persons:
Anchorage, Alaska -All Items, Groups,
and Subgroups ••
Traffic in Southcentral Alaskan Ports, 1965-1975
Sel~ct~d Regional Model Inputs and Outputs in
High Case, 1980-2000 o...,:
Selected Regional Model Inputs and Outputs in
Low Case, 1980-2000. ..
Selected Regional Model Inputs and Outputs in
Intermediate Case, 1980-"2000 ..
A-12
A-13
B-3
B-9
B-15
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Number
A.
B.
c.
D.
E.
F.
G.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
xii
List of Figures
Figure
Executive Summary:
Southcentral Alaska Water Study Subregions
Total Wage and Salary Employment, Subregions,
1965-1975 ••
Basic Sector Employment, Southcentral Alaska,
1975-2025 ••
Population Projections, Anchorage, 1975-2025 •
Population Projections, Other Cook Inlet, 1975-2025
Population Projections, Gulf of Alaska, 1975-2025.
Population Projections, Kodiak-Shelikof, 1975-2025
Text:
Map of Alaska Census Divisions
Value of Gross Output in Southcentral Alaska
by Industry, 1965-1975
Gross Output and Employment in Contract Construction, .
Southcentral Subregions, 1965-1975
Employment in Support Sector Industries, Southcentral
Alaska, 1965-1975 ••
Relationship of Real Personal Income to Real Output in
Support Sector Industries, Anchorage, 1965-1975
Relationship of Real Output in Support Sector
Industries to Real Income, Other Southcentral, ·
1965-1975 ••
State and Local Government Employment, Selected
Southcentral Alaska Subregions,·l965-1975 ••
Alaska State Econometric Model, Version SG4.SC
xiv
xvi
xviii
xix
xxi
xxii
xxiv
2
16
18
23
25
27
29
47
___ ~"------~aska Southcentral Region Econometric Model,
Version REGSC4 ~~~~~~-50
xiii
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The report of the economic task force of the Southcentral Alaska
Water Study (Level B) was to provide two major pieces of information for
water resource planners: (1) it was to provide a summary of historical
growth of the economy and population of Southcentral Alaska, to show the
reasons behind past economic growth and population growth in the r~gion,
and to identify possible future trends; (2) it was to provide a set of
control projections of the economy and population through the year 2025
to be used by resource planners in identifying future demands for water
and'related land resources in the Southcentral region and its three major
subregions--Cook Inlet, Gulf of Alaska, and Kodiak-Shelikof. (See map,
Figure A.) The base year for the projections was 1975.
Chapter 1 traces the regional economy during the years 1965 to 1975,
a period of rapid growth for both the State of Alaska and the region.
Total employment in Alaska grew by over 100 percent, while Southcentral
employment grew by 130 percent. Total real income-increased. at three
times the U.S. rate in Alaska, and per capita incomes rose at twice the
U.S. rate, bringing Alaska from among the "poor" states to among the
wealthier in per capita terms. The Alaskan economy, which had been quite
seasonal in the past, became significantly less so aver the period,
largely as a result of increased employment in ~he so-called support
sector--trade and services, finance, insurance, real estate, transporta-
tion, communications, and utilities. Part of the impetus for this growth
came from major oil and gas development on the Kenai Peninsula and the
North Slope, and from the associated construction projects such as the
Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline Project. Much of the rest of the support
----- - - ---sec for-growth -was a result: -of--eb:e-grcrwth--o-f-state and lo-cal-government,
which was funded heavily by taxes and other revenues of the oil and gas
industry.
Barrow-North Slope Division 1..:.!"-:-.~-·-:-•
I
I jj
"'''"'":··~-,_-.. · ---~Vpper Yukon . .. .. -·· .... _ .. --.... -.... -.. ")
K b ·.· 0:·: ·. -'\ ( Division !·~----·,,;~ o~u< 1Y.1sron ;··.. 1 -· ·
(;",/_ ~~~ ~ ~~·· ~-·~
't ..... ....._ -~'1 ' Yukon • Koyu~ul<\ J~-y-'7. . ·~
19 ~~ v• .. o··-· ·r .. • F"rrb"nks ) Division . . IVIsron ~·-~ .• "'· --. l • . DIVISIOn./ . .
db 7 _./
:J ~ · /?' 'r Southca·st "\.. ~. ' 1 ~~ J.--V""'"'""~o,;''··"J / I,., Fairbanks ·D~' ~~ . ( & , I IVISI~f) •
.... .... _ .... __ I ................ ---~, . ,..,#',;/'II .fW~ \ . _____ .... v .J .
I
' . ( \
Wodc-· . ' · H .. -·---· · I Kuskokwim Di.v .. i.sio'n
·-..... _ _
1
1 i~o1~!~·-~t. · ···
~\. '· ..... _ ,__. ~~ ~) -4----L---~ ...,.._/' ""/) .
I ,!{:j' ·. ...... Bethel. . ,...-., ~ {, Division ;I ~.s·.._., . ...._,r
~ ' ~~ . .sr~st~}._~_oy .
I
I
1
';) ) ;~rv!sron e;:5f;
s~ ,r_ ,
-({fAJ,.;;-.~ . ... _...... -·-·-----~r·~· ii.J;. ·-·---·-·r-· ~·~;ri_s~~~ say : ~H ~~I porouoh Division J I
~
Southcentral Alaska Water Study Subregions
Figure A
of Alaska
Aleutian
. I .
,~-
~ ·I
----·-
Kodiak-Shelikof
. I·
.' --\
-~--('>-· -~----·---~ ... ~--·-·· 0------·.--.... (""', ..................... -·· .. 0........ ............. ..... ...... ........... .. .............. . \ / \) (') .... ..... --0 ... ------·----0 ...
XV
Southcentral Alaska went through three distinct phases of growth
between 1965 and 1975, distinguished by the primary causal factor.
Between 1965 and about 1970, a major driving force in the economy was
the development of the Kenai Peninsula and Upper Cook Inlet oil fields.
<
During this period, wage and salary employment grew at a rate of 6.3 per-
cent per year·, population at a rate of 4.3 percent, income at 8.3 percent.
Nineteen sixty-nine marked the beginning of a new period of growth. A
$900 million mineral lease sale of lands at Prudhoe Bay, and a subsequent
rapid increase in state budgets supplied much of the impetus for growth
between 1970 and 1973. During this period, employment grew at 6.7 percent
per year, population at 4.8 percent, and income at 7.0 percent. Finally,
beginning in 1974, the construction of the.Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline
took place, superimposing a large construction boom on top of an economy
already expanding fairly rapidly. The average annual 1973-1975 growth
rate in employment was 18.4 percent per year; population, 10.3 percent
per year; and income, 18.0 percent.
There are at least four distinct but interlinked economies in the
Southcentral region, and each of the·four grew at a different rate,
largely because of the major influences creating economic growth in
Alaska over the period 1965 to 1975. The Cook Inlet subregion is dom-
inated by Anchorage which, as the major trade, transportation, and
financial center of the state, grew fairly rapidly in each of the three
subperiods. The remainder of Cook Inlet grew rapidly during the 1965-
1970 period, and during the expansion between 1973 and 1975, the latter
a result of the suburbanization of Anchorage and the pipeline project.
Gulf of Alaska showed hardly any growth until the pipeline, and rapid
growth thereafter. Kodiak-Shelikof was relatively untouched by major
development activity and maintained a low rate of growth in employment.
Figure B summarizes the employment growth process in the regional econo-
mies for the period 1965-1975.
0
Employment
(Thousands)
Figure B
Total Wage and Salary Employment,
Subregions, 1965-1975
,• 1',.._;.:)
:1 ~· ,• .. -
10
• • • • ~ • :. =~ ·!· :=& : -·--I . . •
(.~
I ''" 67 t08 '9 70 71
A 0 (j ('1
Cook Inlet
Anchorage Only
\~ -.. -
"Other" Cook Inlet Only ~ Gulf of Alas~ ;=:; ~ Kodiak-Shel~kof.
72. 73 74 75 Year
(i (]
Chapter 2 deals with the m~thodologyand data US:eci toproject· the ·
g"li"owth of the Southcentral economy between 1975 and ·2025 for two scenarios--:-
high development and low development--while the methodology and assumptions
for the intermediate case appear in the first section ·of the intermediate
case addendum to the report. Those not interested in the details of the
econometric models which were used may wish to skip the discussion of
these models on pages 46 to 56 in the text. The procedure foilowed to
the year 2000 was to estimate the highest., lowest, and an intermediate
range of employment and/or output which could be expected for ·each of
the basic industries for the state, Anchorage, and the remainder of
Southcentral Alaska and to use the models to estimate nonhasic· (support
sector) employment and population. The combination of all high-range
projections gave the high development scenario, the combination of all
the low-range projections gave the low range scenario, and the combination
of all intermediate-range projections, the intermediate scenario. The
future total basic industry employment,. is shown in five-year increments
in Tables A, B, and C on pages xxv, xxvii, and xxix for the high, low,
and intermediate cases and is summarized in Figure C. The methodology . .
used to disaggregate the assumptions and results for the subregional
level can be found on pages 69 to 72 in the text, and pages AD~8 to
AD-10 in the addendum.
The resulting output for civilian employment and population appears
in Chapter 3, and in the third section of the intermediate case addendum.
Briefly, the results are as follows: . In ~nchorage, the total populatton
in the high case reaches 501 thousand in the year 2000, and 660 thousand
by 2025. The corresponding levels in the intermediat.e case are 425 thousand
and 534 thousand, and they are 375 thousand and 421 thousand in the low
case. Anchorage population is shown in Figure D. A model run was also
done to test the effect of removing the Northwest Alaska gas pipeline
from the list of development projects in the intermediate case (pp. AD-26
to AD-28). Since Anchorage population depends upon economic development
-~ ~ ----~~ ---atl-over~tlre--s-ta-te-;-tlre~growt:h---rates-are~substant±a:l:--±n~sptte~o£--the--fuc+-~~~~~~
• 7~
----r[----------j·---____ J ___ _
Figure C
Basic Sector Employment
SQuthcent~al Alaska, 1975-2025
' . .
.X High Development
1980 1995 1990 1995 ~oao 2Q05 ~010 2ol5 2.02.0 UJ~S
•' .
~ .....
1-'•
1-'•
!SOO
Figure D
Population Projections, Anchorage,
1975-2025
Population for:
ANCHORAGE
X = High Case
+ ::::; Intermediate Case,
• = Low Case
XX
that very little of the projected development other than government growth
occurs in Anchorage. Removing the gas line makes little difference.
The remainder of Cook Inlet is illustrated in Figure E. Several
large projects, including the Pacific LNG plant, oil development in
Lower Cook Inlet~ coal development at Beluga, the state capital move;
and agricultural and fisheries development are tentatively planned for
this region. Consequently,_ there is considerable disparity among the
three cases, depending upon th~ level of development. The chief differ-
ences between the high and intermediate cases are the level of government
growth, which is much lower in the intermediate case, and the fact that
only about half the fisheries and agricultural development programmed for
the high case takes place in the intermediate case. The low case features
still lower government growth (no capital move), essentially no fisheries
and agricultural development, and reduced employment associate~ with oil
and gas. Although not shown here, some of the population estimated for
Anchorage may actually appear in this region because of increasing sub-
urbanization of the Anchorage metropolitan area into the Matanuska-
Susitna Borough. The entire region outside of Anchorage is relatively
insensitive to the Northwest gas project, showing about 1,300 fewer
people without the project by the year 2000, so no-attempt was made to
disaggregate the impact of the sensitivity run to the three subregions.
_ Sensitivity estimates for the Southcentral economy are shown in Table AD.8
on page AD-27 of the addendum.
Gulf of Alaska is featured in Figure F. In the high case, the
major driving forces in th~ economy are the Alpetco petrochemical refinery,
employing about 1,900 people, plus fisheries and government and oil and
gas development in the Gulf of Alaska. In the intermediate case, there
is an Alpetco ~roject, but it is a fuels refinery which employs only about
400 people. In addition, there is less fisheries development, and oil
and g13.s is no~ found in the Gulf of Alaska-. The low case features only
a little government and support sector growth and no oii -ancrgas~~ r:Lslieries·;
or Alpetco project.
··;.;
'
i
(
:c
·i
c
c
'J:~
i c !
0
c
Figure E
Population Projections, Other Cook Inlet
1975-2025
I
Population for:
OTHER
COOK INLET
X = High Case
+ = Intermediate Case
• = Low Case
10
................... C) ....
Figure F
Population-Projections, Gulf of Alaska,
1975-2025
Population for:
GULF OF ALASKA
X = High Case
X
X . 1-'·
1-'•
+ = Intermediate Case'
• = Low Case
xxiii
Finally, Kodiak-Shelikof population is depicted in Figure G. In
the high case, there are two major driving forces--fisheries development
and Western Gulf of Alaska oil and gas. In the intermediate case, there
is no discovery of oil and gas in the Western Gulf and the level of
bottomfish development and additional development of current fisheries
is cut in half. In the low case, there is no development of either oil·
and gas or fisheries, and the major source of growth is government
employment.
The following tables summarize the economic task projections for
the high, intermediate, and low case. They are repeated in the text of
the report.
u)B
Persons Figure G
·· · 'Population Projections, Kodiak-Shelikof,
.. . 1975-2025
/
.(
/
/
.... +"
./ ~
. ¥ -·--/ . _ .... .--
/ / . -·-. / . _.--/ ?"*---_.._ ...... ---·--
.· 'tl.~ •
!,.,...cw;T"
a~1'5 l9iO 1985 •990 199S 2000 t.oos 2.010 2.0./S" ~ao 2-o£5
Population for:~
. KODIAK-SHELIKOF
X = High Case
+ = Int.ermediate Case·
• = Low Case
• I
(
XXV
Table A t
Southcentral Water Study
High Case Projections (HIGHSC3)
(Thousands)·
.C
Other-Gulf of Kodiak-
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof Total
Resident Population: t
1975 177.8 31.2 11.7 8.8 229.5
80 206.0 39.0 10.8 9.7 265.5
85 255.2 61.1 15.8 17.6 349.8
90 324.1 79.2 17.4 22.7 443.4
95 391.9 103.1 16.5 25.8 537.4 ! c
2000 500.6 145.6 19.7 34.0 699.8
05 525.5 162.1 21.9 37.9 747 •. 3
10 557.5 179.6 24.2 41.9 803.2
15 589.3 199.5 26.9 46.6 862.3
20 625.1 218.2 29.4 51.0 923.7 t
2025 659.5 236.1 31.9 55.1 982.6
'.
xxvl
High Case Projections (continued)
Other Gulf of Kodiak-·
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Sheliko.f
Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employmen.t: ·
197~ 46.406 4.285 1.819 1.426
80 59.421 8.920 2.048 1.828
85 82.925 15.901 3.726 3.237
90 114.826 21.858 4.;1..94 4.315
. 95 145.947 . 30.809 4.036 5.007
2000 . 199.482 48.221 4.867 . 6.864
05 209.356 53.739 5.424 7.649
10 221.726 59.592 6.015 8.483 .
15 234.155 66.234 6.685 9.428
20 248.049 72.425 7.310 10.309
2025 261.648 78.310 7-904 11.147
Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed:. except
Fishing and Agriculture, and Nilitary):
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary Employment:
1975 (69.645) (8.745)
Total Civilian Employment:
1975 69.645
. 80 84.600
85 109.494
. 90 143.659
95 176.946-
2000
05
10
15
.20
2025
232.846
244.933
260.588
276.083
293.531
.310.229
9.186
16.795
28.682
36.775
48.300
70.208
78.241
86.-763.
96.433
105.447
114.016
(5.598) (3.802)
5.953 4.614
6.146 5.628
9.458 9.498
10.185 . 12.076
9.417. 13.380
10.951 17.523
12.204 19.528
13.533 21.655
. 15.041 24.068
16.447 26.318
17.784 28.457
·•
·'total·
53.936
72.218
105.789
145.193
185.799
259.434
276.168
295.816
316.502
338.093
359.008
(87.790)
89.398
113~169
157.132.
202.695
248.043
. 331.528
354.905
382.538
. 411.626
441.743
470.485
----.~----·-
··.·.·::-·:· .. ·.··.
xxvii
Table B
·southcentral \Yater Study
Intermediate Case Projections (INTSClO)
(Thousands)
Anchorage
Resident· Population:
1975 .. 177.8
80 205.2
85 . 232.0
90 276.0
95 ·. 334.2
2000 425.0
05 444.5
10 465.1
15 486.5
20 509.4
2025 534.2
Other
Cook Inlet
31.2
35.6
42.6
49.5
59.3
75.5
84.2
90.8
98 .. 0
106.1
115.1
Basic Sector Civilian Employment
. Employment in Parentheses):
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary
1975 (23.239). (4.460)
Civilian
1975 23.239 4.901
80 24.611 7.401
85 25.683 8.427
90 27.203 9.438
95 28.879 10.379
Gulf of
Alaska
11.7
10.0
9.5
9.8
11.8
14.6
15.7
16.9
18.2
19.8
21.4
(1975 Wage and
(3. 779) .
4.134
3.635
3.369
3.296
3.707
Kodiak-
Shelikof
8.8
9·3
12~4
15.9
. 19.3
25.3
27.2
29.3
31.6
34.2
37.2
Salary
(2.376)
3.188 .
3.458
4.282
4.251
5.132
Total
229.5
260.1
296.5
351.2
424.6
540.4
571.6'
602.1
634.3
669.5
707.9
(33.854)
35.462
39.105
41.761
44.188
48.097
2000 30.634 12.242 4.374 6.842 54.092
05 32.124 12.890 4.606 7.204 56.824
10 33.701 .13.635 '.4.872 7.620 59.828
15 35.365 14.441 5~160 8.071 63~037
20 37.143 15.348 5.484 8.578 66.553
!
I . !
(
'
(
t
c
c
c
' i c
(;-;
'
. ------~---2024} .. ~--~-.. --~9-.069~·-.:------16.-3-'12------~.-5 .• -850~~-~~--9-.-J.~Q---~~----70-.-44±-------~---~;;
I
' . !
xxviii
Intermediate Case Projections (continued)
Anchorage
Other
Cook Inlet
Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employment:
1975 46.406 4.285
80 54.418 8.153
85 71.833 10.124
90 91.332 13.147
95 119.551 16.958
2000 166.544 23.581
OS 174.586 25.584
10 182.996 27.864
15 191.774 30.381
~0 200.989 33.194
2025 211.000 36.370
Gulf of
Alaska
1.819
1.812
2.189
2.307
2.780
3.499
3.796
4.134
4.508
4.925
5.397
·Kodiak-
Shelikof
1.426
1.663
2.214
2.364
3.069
4.406
4.780
5.206
5.677
6.202
6.796
Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed, Except
Fishing and Agriculture, and Military):
Non~Ag. Wage ~ Salary Employment
+915 (69. 645) (8. 745)
Total.Civi1ian Employment
1975 69.645
80 79.029
85 97.516
90 118.535.
95 148.430
2000 197.178
05 206.710
10 2;1.6.697
15 227.139
20 238.132
-------------2Q~,2_--___ , __ ~_2.Q~Q~~-
9.186
15.554
18.551
22.585
27.337
35.823
38.474
41.499
44.822
48.542
52.742
(5.598) (3.802)
5.953 4.614
5.447 5.121
5.558 . 6.496
5.603 6.615
6.487 8.201
7.873 11.248
8.402 11.984
9.006 12.826
9.668 13.748
10.409 14.780
11.247. 15.946
Total
53.936
66.046
86.360
109 .. 150
142.358
. 198.030
208.746
220.200
232.340
245 .. 310
259.563
(87.790)
89.398
105.151
128.121
153.338
190.455
252.122
265.570
280.028·
295.377
311.863
330.004
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
05
10
15
20
2025
Anchorage
xxix
Table C
Southcentral Hater Study
Low Case Projections (LOWSC6)
(Thousands)
· Other
Cook Inlet
Gulf of
Alaska
Resident Population:
177.8 31.2 11.7
205.0 34.2 8.6
226.7 34.2 8.8
261.1 38.1 8.4
309.7 43.3 8.6
375.2 49.2 8.9
383.7 53.1 9.6
392.4 57.3 10.4
401.3 61.5 11.1
410.5 65.9 11.9
420.7 70.4 12.7
Kodiak-
Shelikof
8.8
8.8
12.0
11.1
11.5
11.8
12.7
13.8
14.8
15.8
16.9
Basic Sector Civilian Employment (1975 Wage and Salary
Employment in Parentheses):
c I
c
t
229.5
256 .. 6
281.7
318.7
373.1 c
445.1
459.1
473.9
488.7
504.1 c 520.7
c
'
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary
1975 (23.239) (4.460) (3.779) (2.376) (33.854)
Civilian b 1975 23.239 4.901 4.134 3.188 35.462
80 24.964 7.133 2.659 3.221 37.977
85 25.238 6.640 2.679 .3. 791 38.348
90 25.900 6.456 2.361 3.286 38.003
95 26.,631 6.573 2.377 ·3.310 38.891
I I
2000 27.331 6.747 2.393 3.337 39.808 'o
05 28.101 7.256 2.573 3.589 41.519
10 28.893 7.812 2. 771 3.864 43.340 . !
' 15 29.708 8.345 2.960 4.127 45.140 i
20 30.546 8.884 3.151 4.394 . 46.975 . t
2025 31.459 9.426 3.343 4.662 48.890
··~--~-~---·~--~~----.. -~-
. I
Lmv Case Projections (continued)
Other Gulf of Kodiak-
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof Total -.
Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employment:
19-75 46.406 4.285 1.819 1.426 53.936
80 59.522 7.836 1.170 1.440 69.968
85 68.451 8.362 1.179 l. 695 79.687
. 90 83.114 9.947 1.039 1.469 95.569
95 107.071 12.089 1.046 1.480 . 121.686
2000 141.162 14.709 1.053 1.492 158.416
05 144.131 15.820 1.133 1.605 162.689
10 147.131 17.033 1.219 1. 728 167.111
15 150.164 ·. 18.19/l 1.302 1.846 171.506
20 153.229 19.369 1.387 1.965 175.950
2025 156.669 20.551 1.471 2.085 180.776
Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed, except
Fishing and Agriculture, and 'Hilitary):
Non-Ag. \-lage & Salary Employment:
1975 (69.645) (8.745) (5.598) (3 .802) (87.790)
Total Civilian Employment:
1975 69.645 9.186 5.953 4.614 89.398
80 84.486 14.969 3.829 4.661 107.945
. 85 93.689 15.002 3.858 5.486 118.035
90 109.014 16.403 3.400 4.755 133.572
95 133.702 18.662 3.423 4.790 160.577
2000 168.493 21.456 3.446 4.829 198.224
OS 172.232 23.076 3.706 5.194 , 204.208
10 17Q.024 24.845 3.990 5.592 210.451
-----------r5 . 179.872 26.539 4.262 . 5. 973 216.646
20 183.775 28.253 4.538 6.359 . 222.925
2025 188.128 29.977 4.814 6. 747 229.666
CHAPTER 1
SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA'S ECONOMY 1965-75
Between 1965 and 1975, Alaska's economy grew quite rapidly, and
one of the fastest growing areas was Southcentral Alaska. There is
no single summary measure of growth which is useful for all purposes,
because economic growth is a multi-dimensional process. Therefore, this
chapter presents several measures which together describe the general
growth of Southc~ntral Alaska's economy and many of the changes which
occurred in it during the ten-year period 1965 to 1975.
The first section of this chapter discusses the economy of South-
central Alaska as a single unit and relates economic growth in South-
central to growth in the entire Alaska economy and to growth in the
United States as a whole. The second section discusses the growth of
individual sectors of the Southcentral economy, and the third section
compares and contrasts economic growth in three principal subregions
of Southcentral Alaska: the Cook Inlet subregion, the Gulf of Alaska
subregion, and the Kodiak-Shelikof subregion. These region·s roughly
correspond to the following Census Divisions from the 1970 Census of
Population:
Southcentral Alaska
• Cook Inlet: Anchorage, Kenai-Cook Inlet, Matanuska-
Susitna, Seward
e Gulf of Alaska: Cordova-McCarthy,.Valdez-Chitina-Whittier
• Kodiak-Shelikof: Kodiak
A map from the 1970 Census of Population appears as Figure 1, which allows
the reader to identify the study region. In order to make the text more
___ ~-. --·~ ~~~~a_b).~~_()_n_!y~s\lnnn~EY_!Ci~:I-~s~_py~~E_~n_!~_te~~---~or_e_.'!~~ai!~cl_~~ta ----~-~--~~-
appear in the Appendix.
A
8
c
D
E
F
3 4
.............. _ ... 1 ___ _
1] -----------------------
!.
;I o,
,'1
1,
i
!
i
5 6 7
l<USKDKWIM
-
8 9 10
Figure 1
•
LEGEND
Placu of 25,000 to 50 . .000 onhabtlants outside SMSA's
SCALE:
so '90 -1!)0 2QOIIILES
AI.EUTtAH ISLANDS (PART)
•.o ()
•
..$-=-"' '"
~
B
A
8
c
D
r E!
F
~--~~~=:mt'/~~-3-~~--~---~~~~-~~4~:==::=~s~~~:=~=:6==~~==-17~-=~~~a::::::::::~::::::::::~-,~.------O~------6---9
0---__ ___f' lQ -',__--~------() _· --------~----0------------fl-----~·--. -----~ _()__
i
I }!Poi-
' .
:. ';]'~~ ' •• I
j
'3
Growth of Southcentral Economy
The growth of the Alaska economy can.be conveniently summarized by
examining changes in the value of economic output, employment, incomes,
population, and prices brought about through the growth process. All
five measures increased substantially during the period 1965 to 1975.
The real (inflation adjusted) value of output in Alaska went up at about
three times the average U.S. rate, while Southcentral Alaska rose even
faster. Employment in Alaska increa~ed by over 100 percent during these
years, and Southcentral employment grew 130 percent. There was also a
marked reduction in the seasonality of employment dur:j.ng much of the
period.. Real incomes of Alaskans rose much faster than those of most
Americans between 1965 and 1975: total real income increased at almost
three ~imes the U.S. rate, while per capita income increased at almost
t~ic~ the U.S. rate. Partly as a result of the rapid grow.th of the econo-
my, the population of the state rose about 53 percent between 1965 and
1975, while the Southcentral region's population grew about 73 percent.
Prices, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, increased at a rate one
to two percent less than the U.S. average, with the exception of the pipe-
line construction years.
One of the more useful measures of economic growth is gross product,
which is the total value at final sale of the goods and services p~oduced
by an economy. The Institute of Social and Economic Research has pro-
duced annual estimates of Alaska gross product since 1974. The Institute
also has constructed historical series on a statewide level back to 1961
and regional series as far back as 1965.1 These series are comparable
to similar estimates provided on a national scale by the U.S. Department
of Commerce. Since the Institute began preparing these estimates, the
U.S. series has been converted to 1972 constant dollars. The Alaska
l d · t• th d 1 . 1· d . K d Gross pro uct est1ma 1on me o o ogy 1s out 1ne 1n resge an
Thomas [1] and Thomas and Goodwin [2].
4
series has been adjusted in Table 1 to account for this change, while the
original Alaska series by detailed industry group appears as Table A.l
in the appendix. As can be seen from the table, the value of real out-
put produced by the Alaska economy grew at a substantially faster rate
than that of the U.S. as a whole. The Southcentral economy grew even
faster over the ten-year period, while the pipeline construction years
1974 and 1975 show faster growth in the state than in Southcentral.
In 1965, Southcentral produced 53.1 percent of all goods and services
produced in Alaska. By 1973, the ratio had risen to 63.3 percent, and
it was still 57.2 percent in 1975, even though the rest of the state had
begun to overtake the Southcentral region. (The latter probably was a
transitory phenomenon caused by pipeline construction.)
Economic growth offers increased opportunities for employment.
Table 2 shows the rate of growth in nonagricultural wage and salary ,
employment for Southcentral Alaska and the State of Alaska, which is the
most consis:tent indicator of growth in total employment available in the
state. Estimates of other types of emplo.yment--self-employed, unpaid
family workers, and agricultural workers and fishermen--are troublesome,
particularly because of changing coverage for fishermen under the state's
unemployment insurance laws. Separate estimates of persons.employed state-
wide (mostly Southcentral) in agriculture and in Southcentral region fish-
ing are presented in Table 3. Since the reporting source and area covered
is different in each case, and the definitions of who is employed vary,.
the reader is cautioned against adding the figures in Tables 2 and 3 to
obtain an estirnate of total employment. Finally, it should be noted
that employment in Alaska has been quite seasonal in the past, so that
the estimated annual average employment shown in these tables tells only
part of the story. Accordingly, in Table 2 the ratio of average employ-
ment in the highest quarter to average employment in the lowest quarter
of the year is reported to show how seasonality in employment has varied,
both over time and between Southcentral Alaska and the state as a whole.
)
I
J
I
I
I
(:
I
r
I
1 ,,
~
l
I
I
(':
1
Year
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
-5
Table 1
Comparison of the Growth in Constant Dollar
Real Output: Southcentral Alaska,
Alaska, and United States 1965-1975
(Millions of 1972 Dollars)
Southcentral Alaska Gross u.s. Gross
Gross Productl State Productl . National Product
666.6 1,256.3 925,900
753.7 1,369.3 981,000
906.1 1,513.7 1,007,700
1,10L3 1,759.0 1,051,800
1,177.3 1,975.9 1,078,800
1,264.3 2,075.5 1,075,300
1,330.4 2,106.6 1,107,500
1,283.4 2,032.5 1,171,100
1,338.4 2,115.1 1,235,000
1,546.4 2,508.2 1,217,800
1,838.3 3,214.8 1,202,100
Average Annual
Rate of Growth 10.7% 9.9% 2.6%
1965-1975
!Adjustment Factor = L514, the ratio of 1958 GNP in 1972 dollars
to 1958 GNP in 1958 dollars.
6
Table 2
Civilian Non-Agricultural Wage and Salary Employment
and Seasonality Coefficients: Southcentral
Alaska and State of Alaska 1965-1975
(Number of Persons)
-----------------~------
------------------~1-----------------------
Ratio of average employment in highest quarter (usually, the third
quarter) to employment in lowest quarter (usually, the first quarter).
c
I
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
7
Table 3
State Agricultural Employment and Southcentral Fisheries
Employment and Measures of Seasonality, 1965-1975
(Number of Persdns)
State Southcentral
Agricultural
Seasonality2
Fishing. 3 High Month/ · 4 Employment! Employment 'Annual Average Ratio
900 2.333 NA NA
925 2.333 NA NA
900 2.333 NA NA
2.200
/
800 NA NA
750 2.000 NA NA
800 1.660 · .. 2' 193 3.340
900 1.833 2,052 3.540
1,000 2.333 f,853 3.460
700 2.000 2,235 3.270
750 1.666 1,998 3~080
750 1.500 2,031 3.100
1 Includes farm operators and other members. of household who work on
the farm during the survey week for 15 hours or more without receiving
cash wages, plus hired workers who received pay for one or more hours of
work on the farm in the survey week. Source: U.S.D.A., Alaska Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service, Alaska Agricultural Statistics. Separate
figures for Southcentral were not available.
2High month survey week employment divided by low month surveyweek
employment. Survey months are March, June, September, and December.
3Data from special employment estimates made from Alaska Department
of Fish and Game fish ticket data by George W. Rogers and Richard F.
Listowski, 1978. Includes Aleutian Islands.
4 July average divided by annual average.
8
Table 3 reports the ratio of high quarter to low quarter state agri-
cultural employment, and high month to annual average employment for
fisheries in Southcentral Alaska. A declining ratio means reduced
seasonality, while an increasing ratio means increased seasonality.
As can be seen from Table 2, nonagricultural wage and salary employ-
ment increased substantially during the ten-year period 1965 to 1975 in
poth the Southcentral region and in Alaska as a whole, while seasonality·
declined between 1965 and 1973. (Additional employment detail appears
in Appendix Table A.2.) The decline in seasonality came from two sources.
In the first place, as will be shown in the next section, much of the
growth in employment occurred in the support sectors, such as government,
traqe, and services, which tend to be less seasonal than the traditional
Alaska employ!fient base in seafood processing, construction, and some
111ining. Second, there have been some technological innovations, such
as year-round construction techniques, which have tended to reduce sea-
sonality in traditionally seasonal industries. The sharp increase in
seasonali,ty in 1974 and 1975 was mainly due to the very large-scale
;ii;easonal pattern of employment on the Tr~~s-Alaska Oil Pipeline project,
forwhich statewide employment varied between five thousand in the low
.' .
quarter to in6're than twenty thousand in the high quarter. Other evi-
dence suggests that seasonality has continued to decline, apart from
this project.
Table. 3 shows a fairly constant or slightly declining employment base
in agriculture, with very marked seasonality·. Most of this seasonality
I
.is a result of the hiring and laying off of part-time or seasonal help,
~hile family help remains employed the whole year. Fisheries employment
pas increased substantially, while seasonality remains high. Table 2
shows that, because of its larger base in the relatively nonseasonal
support sectors, the Southcentral economy has grown faster and tended
to remain less seasonal than the economy of the state as a whole.
J
I
I
I c
1
c r
I
).
I
'I
I
b
I
I
r
I
--------~---~----~-------------------------------------------------------------------. -------------------------------e-
9
Besides the employment opportunities afforded by economic growth,
another significant impact on individuals is the incomes earned in pro-
duction. Table 4 shows the U.S. Department of Commerce estimates of
residence-adjusted constant dollar personal income (real income) for
Southcentral Alaska, Alaska as a whole, and the United States, reported
in 1967 dollars. Additional detail appears in Table A.3 in the appendix.
The Alaska data is reported in 1967 Anchorage dollars and the United
States data in 1967 U.S. dollars. This data is useful for estimating
the aggregate increase in purchasing power of persons living in each
location; however, because of differences in prices between Alaska and
the Lower 48 contiguous states (about 42 percent in the fall of 1975),
Alaska real per capita incomes are not strictly comparable to U.S.
figures. Per capita income for the Alaska locations is obtained by
dividing real personal income by the Alaska Department of·Labor estimate
of population, which varies from the U.S. Bureau of the Census estimate
for Alaska, and which is probably more accurate for 1975 than the Census
estimate.
The table indicates that real income and real per capita income
have been growing more rapidly in Alaska than in the United States as
a whole. This was particularly true during the 1974-75 U.S. recession,.
during which income in the United States fell slightly, while Alaska
income rose substantially as a result of the pipeline project even when
increases in prices at;e taken into'account. The. overall income increase
masks a very uneven distribution in income gains among the various popu-
lation groups; however, it does fairly reflect an increase in overall
purchasing power in the Alaska economy and iricreasing.demanq for goods
and services.
The rapid economic growth in Southcentral Alaska anci in Alaska as a
whole has resulted in substantial in-migration of people seeking jobs in
the Alaska economy. Table 5 summarizes population growth in the region
Table 4
Real Personal Income and Per Capita Income:
Southcentral Alaska, Alaska, and the
United States 1965-19751
(1967 Dollars)
Soutlicentral Alaska Rest of State State of Alaska United
I Per Capita Real Income Per Capita Real Income Per Capita Real Income Real Incqme
{103 2~: Income ~103 22 Income (103 22 Income (106 22
I
I
1965 $489,55~ $3,693 $421,269 $3,177 $910,828 $3,435 $562,988
66 496,71~ 3,638 429,284 3,181 926,000 3,411 595,845
67 572,572 4,083 444,428 3,228 1,017,000 3,660 620,023
I
68 608,28Jt 4,163 473,597 3,413 1,081,878 3,798 650,469
69 686,24:11 4,520 488,452 3,422 1,174,693 3 '9'88 672,348
70 730 364 4,459 556,132 4,014 1,286,496 4,255 682,279
, I
71 783,92~ 4,516 600,483 4,367 1,384,410 4,450 702,351
72 829,73~ 4,566 635,323 4,526 1,465,056 4,548 746,579
73 894,841 4,742 765,754 5,405 1,660,596 5,027 785,198
74 1,022,75~ 5,257 791,284 5,053 1,814,040 5,166 778,329
75 1,246,72~ 5,433 1,013,944 5,789· 2,260,670 5,587 773,264
I Average Annua] Rate of Growth: 1965-1975
9.8% 3.9% 9.2% 6.2% 9.5% 5.0% 3.2%
1 Income data used to compile this table are from computer printouts provided by the U.S. Department
of Comme~ce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Economics Information System. Population data for
-Alaska at1
1
e from Alaska Department of Labor, Current Population Estimates by Census Division.
I
I
.I
I,
I
I
I
!
--r --A·--·-------rn------~-----A-----·--;-...--------~--· ----.ri--------·-··--~ ---
States
Per Capita
Income
$2,947
3,087
3,188
3,318
3,400
3,410
3,406
3,586
3,742
3,682
3,630
2.1%
11
Table 5
Population Growth: Southcentral Region
and Alaska 1965-1975
(Number of Persons)
South'central
Region State
1965 132,572 265,192
66 136,549 271,505
67 140,223 277 '906
68 146,100 284,880 .
69 151,810 294,560
70 163,792 302,361
71 173,573 311,070
72 181,736 322,115
73 188,698 330,;'365
74 194,569 351,159
75 229,492 404,634
Average Annual
Rate of Growth 5.6% 4.3%
1965-1975
12
and in the state as a whole. (Geographic detail appears in Appendix
Table A.4.) Two major economic motivating factors explain the large
population increase. One is that real per capita incomes have been
rising in Alaska faster than in the United States as a whole, indicat-
ing that Alaska has been a region of improving wage scales compared to
the rest of the United States. In addition, employment growth provides
additional job opportunities for individuals. Some migrant job seekers
also bring families. The Alaska Department of Labor estimates that net
migration accounted for 73 thousand of the 103 thousand increase in
resident population between 1970 and 1975, about 72 percent of the in-
crease, while natural increase accounted for only 29 thousand, or about
28 percent of the total.
Growing economies often are characterized by growing demand and
supply bottlenecks which add to pressures for rising prices. Offsetting
this is the fact that growth provides opportunities for economies-of
scale in the distribution of goods and services and provides opportuni-
ties for import substitution, which may reduce consumer prices. Alaska's
prices are closely linked to U.S. prices, largely because Alaska pro-
duces very few consumer goods, but rather imports most of them from the
Lower 48. Table 6 indicates that the rate of growth of Alaska consumer
prices, as measured by the Anchorage Consumer Price Index, was generally
lower than that of the United States as a whole between 1965 and 1973,
probably as a result of transportation savings, competition, and econo-
mies in distribution in growing Alaska markets. During the pipeline
construction period, however, which was also a period of business reces-
sion_ in the Lower 48, Alaska prices grew at a rate faster than in the
country as a whole. Table A.5 in the appendix shows the distribution of
Alaska price increases among the major categories of goods and services
purchased by consumers.
J
T
I
i
(
I r
I
i
£
i
I
I
··!f
I
I
I
.I c
I
<)
0
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
Cl 72
73
74
75
0
0
0
13
Anchorage and U.S. Consumer Price Index,
Percentage Change, and Difference
in Percentage Change, 1965-1975
(1967 = 100.0)
Index Percent Change
Anchorage u.s. Anchorage u.s.
94.2 94.5 NA NA
100.0 97.2 6.2 2.9
100.0 100.0 o.o 2i. 9
102.6 104.2 2.6 4~2
105.9 109.8 3.2 5.4
109.6 116.3 3.5 5.9
112.9 121.3 3.0 4.3
115.9 125.3 2.7 3.3
120.8 133.1 4.2 6.2
133.9 147.4 10.8 10.7
152.3 161.2 13.7 9.4
Difference
NA
+ 3.3
-2.9
-1.6
-2.2
-2.4
-1.3
-0.6
...;, 2.0
+ 0.1
+ 4.3
14
Distribution of. Economic Grm.;rth Among
ndustries and Areas, SouthcentraL.Region
The growth which took place in the Southcentral economy between
1965 and 1975 was not uniform across industries. Table 7 and Figure 2
demonstrate this fact in percentage growth terms for.two subperiods:
1965 to 1973 (pre-pipeline) and 1974 and 1975 (pipeline construction).
Both the figure and the table also show that the rate of growth in
nearly all industries accelerated appreciably with the advent of pipe-
line construction in 1974. Industry-by-industry causes of growth are
discussed below, divided into basic industries (solid lines in Figure 2)
and support sector (dashed lines in Figure 2). For purposes of this.
discussion, basic industries are mining, manufacturing, construction,
agriculture-forestry-fisheries, and federal government. Support sec-
tor industries are transportation-communications-public utilities,
. wholesale and retail trade, finance-insurance-real estate, services,
and state and local government.
Basic Industries
Growth in these sectors was led by two industries: mining (including
petro~eum) and construction. The main cause of growth in the mining
sect~r was the production of oil and gas from the Kenai Peninsula and
Cook Inlet fields. Oil was discovered at Swanson River in 1957, but
production never amounted to more than 1 million barrels per month until
1966, which inaugurated a steady five-year increase that peaked in 1970
at 7.5 million barrels per month. Prior to 1966, total cumulative value
of oil and gas production from Alaska was about $156 million. The
annual value in 1966 alone was $47 million, and the estimated annual
gross sales accelerated from there to $407 million by 1975. Employment
in production, specialized drilling and construction, field services,
and headquarters grew at an annual rate of about 40 percent in the late
sixties, causing nearly a tripling of mining employment from 694 to 1,913
in the Cook Inlet subregion between 1965 and 1969. As production in the
0 u 0
Industrl
Agr.-Forestry-Fisheries
Mining
Construction
Manufacturing
Food Mfg. Only
Trans.-Comm.-P.U.
Transportation
Communications
~ublic Utilities
Trade
Wholesale
Retail
Fin<=1-nce
Services
Government
Federal
State/Local
0 0 Q (.)
Tabl~ 7
Annual Percent Increase in Real Gross Output,
Southcentral Region and State, 1965 to 1975
Southcentral Rest of State
0
1965-1973 1973-1975 1965-1973 1973-1975
-4.9 32.5 -13.5 70.5
27.2 5.5 13.1 70.2
1.6 48.4 1.7 125.7
10.0 4.5 3.2 3.4
10.1 -1.3 1.9 o. 7 -
10.1 32.1 4.7 36.8
9.7 32.6 4.5 47.4
10.4 34.5 4.1 32.5
10.7 27.4 7.5 20.8
9.9 27.4 6.7 49.0
11.3 38.3 7.3 48.0
8.9 18.6 6.4 49.3
. 9.0 15.8 6.2 31.7
9.2 29.8 6.8 38.9
2~4 3.6 1.2 0.8 -1.1 2.0 -1.1 -5.2
9.4 8.2 8.2 8.5
u k r...J 0
i
I
State
1965-1973 1973~1975
I
9.9 i -5lj.5
,,
. i
24.0 171.2
I
i
1.6 8~.6
i.
5.4 is f-1
5.6 .:. d 4. 'Vt ,.
I
I
!
7.4 3~.2
7. 2 . 38.9 I. 6.6 3~.4
9.6 2~.3
!
i
8.8 3~.5
10.2 4Q.6
7.9 3Q.5
1'·· ..
8.1 2d.4
I ..
8.3 33.1 i .
i .1.0 ll.8 I -1.1 ].1
8.8 8.0
I
I
I
I
I
'Millions of
1958 Dollars ! Figure 2 1
i Value of Gross Output in Southcentral Alaska
!
I
35c~ . I
By Industry, 1965-1975
Mining
Trans.-Comm.-P.U.
I
/~
t.oo /
15'0
/ Trade
y
1
-_" ____ ___. ~. Finance
/ ~ 1·. --~
. _,.. • .........-. ------· . • I . .--_-..
U>O 1 ----:.:::--------. _[__.....-..-·
-------. ...-s . ' . ' -----· .... ------------erv~ces
. . . . .:-•--------. -------. . -------------. .
. . _____-::: ---------~-~· . ---.
. -----------__.,..,___...
so ____ ___.,--:-.---------~-----... ;......;.~~--~
--~...;... __ ----·---·
.. Agr .-Forestry-Fisheries_
. I .. ___ :...." .. ~-----· ·' ... , ..... -.. :...-~--\ --.. _,, .... ' .... """" __________ .. ,~~-----··· ---·-.. ; .
~:f,'$ 11~~ ati'1 aq~ ._,
. -. ' -I ······-···1 -~---·-----· -"·(-;,..~ ............... f ··----~------·------1------· _, -J----1
1'170 . 11111 1<172.. 19.73 11'11'1 If?~
17
Upper Cook Inlet fields first.stabilized and then began to fall off,
·2L ____ --~-----~and_w.i_th_thi'LCQrnple_tiQn_o_LIDQ_S_t_~~P~l_Qt"ca_t_;i,Qn__gng_g_~v-~_lQPJI!~D_Li!Lil-l:ii!K, _____ ~ ____ · __
0
0
0
0
0
employment shrank to 1,343 in 1972. The modest growth in this sector_
after 1973 seems to have come from three sources. In spite of steady
or declining production of oil, the Arab oil embargo and OPEC price
increases caused over a 50 percent rise in-the nominal value of Upper
Cook Inlet production (and some increase in real value) between 1973
and 1975. Second, largely in response to a burgeoning Anchorage market,
natural gas production increased sharply in 1975. Finally, Anchorage
headquarters and other mining industry employment increased by 69 percent
between 1973 and 1975 to 1,300, about 36 p~rcent more than the previous
peak year of 1970. Slight increases in oil field employment occurred on
the Kenai Peninsula as a result of Tesoro refinery and Collier Carbon
and Chemical petrochemical expansion, although neither facility employs
people in mining directly.
Recent development trends in the Cook Inlet-area indicate a con-
tinuation of growth in mining, at least for the near future. No~th
Slope development and increased exploration elsewhere in the state
suggest that Anchorage mining sector employment and output will continue
to grow, while exploratory activity in Lower Cook Inlet, the Northern
Gulf of Alaska, and the Kodiak shelf will lead to greatly expanded
employment and output elsewhere in the region, if exploration efforts
are successful. In any case, there will be some short-term employment
~ncreases associated with exploration efforts.
Construction output remained fairly flat between 1965 and 1973, and
then increased rapidly in response to demands arising both directly and
indirectly from the Trans-Alaska Oil-Pipeline and_other oil and gas de-
velopments. As can be seen in the top, half of Figure 3, ·constant dollar
construction output declines in Anchorage in the late 1960s were-about
offset by inc_reases elsewhere in the region (chiefly, the Kenai Peninsula).
Both areas remained about flat between 1970 and 1973, then both grew rapidly
I Mil~ions of
1958 Dollars
50~
' i
I
~o+
Figure 3
Gross. Output and Employment in Contract Construction,
Southcentral Subregions, 1965-1973
GROSS PRODUCT
1·----------~----------._----------~-z.~ ~
'bL--~---------
Anchorage
Other
Southcentral
04---------4-~------~--------~---------+---------+---------;--------~~------~r-----~--~---------
Tho sands
of ersons
8
7
:J
EMPLOYMENT
4~i------~~~----~--~
11 i'l. 1S
Cook Inlet.
I,Gulf of Alaska:.
Kodiak
19
in· response to Trans-Alaska Pipeline development.· The bottom half of
_;,:"--' ---------.:; ~l.gur-e-3-snow-s-eh-e-p-attern---u-£---'-empt-oynrerrt---±rt-eh~-ehr~-e-study-sulJye~gtorts-.-----~-----
0
0
0
0
The Cook Inlet subregion pattern was a result of the Kenai Peninsula
boom in the late 1960s, followed by a smaller construction expansion in
the 1973 to 1975 period .. The underlying causes were 'expansions of oil
and gas processing facilities and related construction, combined-with--
uneven but continuous employment increases in Anchorage after 1970~
culminating in a construction boom in 1975. Gulf of Alaska ·subregion
employment was influenced primarily by the construction boom in Valdez,
resulting from the building of the pipeline terminal and facilities.
Kodiak-Shelikof experienced contraction of its construction sector in
the late 1960s, apparently due to declining Kodiak Naval Station employ-
ment, stable population, and declining fisheries, but has experienced
increases since about 1970, partly in response to increased fish proces-
sing and in anticipation of offshore oil development.
Overall, recent trends suggest that construction employment and output
correspond with major construction decisions by outside agencies and firms
(an example being the pipeline, or projects such as Pacific LNG's gas
liquefaction facility), and.responses of local communit;y facilities to
overall increase in population and demand for goods and services. There
currently are several large projects pending or being discussed which .. will
mean substantial direct construction employment, and which will probably
lead to some overall increase in the size of .Southcentral's economy, im-
plying a secondary construction response. The likeliest subregion for
the increase is the Cook Inlet subregion, since several major projects
(Pacific LNG, capital move, Beluga coal, Susitna hydro) are proposed for
· this subregion, ~nd because the subregion contains Anchorage which, as
the major fina~cial, trade, and government center, grows in response to
business and government developments all over the state. The outlook
for construction employment in the other two subregions is more likely
to be tied to specific projects and-be of a more cyclical nature.
20
The other basic sectors were less important to overall economic growth.
-------.Agr-~cul-tu"t"e--f'ol.'@St-~y~-f-i-she-r-ies-see-~e-r---,----fe1:'-e*am!)±e--,-showecl-io~s-eye-l~ie-a-l------
nature and did not show substantial increases in real value of output.
Table 8 shows the nominal value of agricultural production (not neces-
sarily sales), value of catch to fishermen,-and inflation-adjusted
output generated by this sector between 1965 and 1975. This sector
accounted for about one percent of output in 1975, although it figures
quite pro~inently in the local economies of Kodiak, Cordova, Homer, and
Seward and provides raw materials for food manufacturing, which added
another 2.8 percent.of the value of 1975 Southcentral output. Forestry
and lumber and wood products play only a very minor role in the South-
central economy at present, contributing only about three-tenths of one
percent of-1975 output and employing 426 people, about three-fourths of
them in Anchorage. The prospects for growth in the agriculture-forestry-
fisheries sector and related processing depend on the ability of American
fishermen and processors to take advantage of rising prices for their
output, the new 200-mile fisheries conservation zone established in
1976, and the ability of the State of Alaska to enhance the very low
salmon runs of recent years. It should be pointed out that even a
doubling of outp~t in agriculture-forestry-fisheries would result in
very modest increases in the overall output of the Southcentral economy,
though it may be important for the employment base of several communities.
Other manufacturing, principally petroleum refining, petrochemicals,
and printing and publishing, has been playing an increasingly important
role within the manufacturing sector, historically dominated by fish
processing. In 1965, other manufacturing accounted for 27.2 percent of
manufacturing output in the Southcentral economy and 33.5 percent of
manufacturing employment (about 53.6 percent of manufacturing employment
in the Cook Inlet subregion). By 1974, output had increased to 33.9 per-
cent of total manufacturing, with an increase of employment to 34.1 per-
cent of the total (1974 is compared to 1965 in order to compare two "down"
years in the salmon cycle). Prospects for growth in other manufacturing
0
0
0
0
,.
/
21
Table 8
Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries
Output Statistics, Southcentral
Alaska, 1965-1975
Value of Value of Catch Real Gross Product
Agricultural Output to Fishermen
(Millions of Dollars)l (Millions of Dollars)2 (Millions of 1958
1965 $ 3.9 $ 22.3 $ 11.1
66 4.2 33._4 16.5
67 4.2 21.7 10.0
68 4.0 39.7 13.5
69 3.5 30.9 12.5
70 4.2 40.7 15.6
71 4.1 36.7 13.1
72 4.6 44.8 12.4
73 5.4 73.5 7.4
74 6.4 65.9 11.0
75 7.2 61.0 13.0
1 source: Alaska Agricultural Statistics, various issues •
. 2 source: Alaska,Department of Fish and Game, Commercial Fisheries
Division, Alaska Catch and Production, various issues.
Dollars)
22
depend mostly on the ability of the region to attract chemical facilit:i,es
~--hased~on~_oil~and~gas_._The~prooposed~ALEETCO~ref"in~~-.~Eor~example",~would-~-· _· ___ ._. ~-
employ more than double the number of per:;;ons_ employed ·in other manufac-
turing in So1,1thcentral in 1975.
Federal government output, .ev:aluated as the wages and salaries paid
to federal employees, stayed just about constant over the entire period,·
as did federal civilian employment. There has been an increase in 'federal
civilian ~mployrnent of about six percent since· 1970, or about 600 persons.
While there is some reason to believe the number of federal positions in
Southcentral Alaska will increase over time, as this part of Alaska becomes
more urbanized and requires more government ·services, and func'tions currently
provided in Juneau and Seattle are provided ·locally, this is· not exp-ected
to be a major growth industry in the future. Almost all future growth
would probably occur in the Cook Inlet subregion, in Anchorage.
Support Sectors
The various support sector industries all followed very similar
growth patterns between 1965 and 1975. Referring back to Table 7 and
figure 2, one can see that in Southcentral Alaska between 1965 and 1973,
the real value of output in transportation, communications, public uti-
lities, trade, finance (including insurance and real estate), services,
and state and local government all grew at between 9 and 11 percent per
annum. Figure 4 shows employment by industry. After 1973, the pipeline
boom and its secondary effects caused· these rates of increase to as much
as triple the 1965-1973 rates. Some of the employment in transportation,
communications, and public utilities and some of the employment in ser-
vices was direct employment on the pipeline project and, therefore, should
be includ'ed as part of the growth in basic sector employment. State and
local government is also "basic" in one sense, since some of.the increase
in state and local employment and output can be attributed directly to
increases in available revenues after the Prudhoe Bay lease sale in 1969.
State and local government expansion provided part of the basic 1ncrease
lO. ThousancQ
of Persons
15-
a4-
li-
12. ...
U-
10-
7-
4-
3-
2.-
l.
o . ...J • · i
0 0
Figure 4
Employment in Support Sector Industries,
Southcentral Alaska
1965-1975
L· J_
0 0
.!. ' ' .. ~
0
' I . ..,,
u
Tr Jde ""'Z-...JI' I
1975=JJ7' 265
Governme1
1Trans .-Comm.-P. U i . .
N w
Finance
24
in economic activity that fueled grmvth in the rest of the support
sector. However, since a large part-of the growtnin government can 5e --~-------~-~
attributed to the increases in staffing due to increased population and
to increased per capita demand for government services, state and local
government has been included in the support sector.
Of the available aggregate stat.istics, the one which best predicts
growth in the support sector on a statewide level is personal income.
Real personal income earned within a subregion is less in determining
local support sector activity, the smaller and less isolated the sub-
region. In small subregions, a high proportion of goods and services
are either provided by other localities or are provided to other locali-
ties. Even so, local real personal income (local demand) has a remarkably
strong effect on the output of the support sectors. Figure 5 demonstrates
that the real income-output relationship for Anchorage is fairlystable
in services and also in trade, although there appears to have been some
departure from the historical relationship in 1975. Tr·ansportation-
communications-public utilities appears to have slowed in. comparison
with personal income growth in Anchorage in the early 1970s. A possible
interpretation of this observation is that transportation in Anchorage
experienced a pause between the Kenai construction boom and.the North
Slope construction boom as a result of slack statewide transportation
demand (see Table A.6), while personal incomes of residents of Anchorage
continued to grow from business generated locally and from the maturing
Southcentral economy. Indeed, examination of the Anchorage census
division employment data reveals that Anchorage transportation employ-
ment was essentially unchanged between 1970 and 1973. Communications
employment was also essentially flat between 1970 and 1974, while public
utilities employment, which reflects local demand, increased steadily.
The break from the past pattern in trade in 1974-75 seems to have been
caused by a rapid maturing of the Anchorage.economy; e.g. Anchorage
wholesale trade employment increased by 40 percent between 1974 and 1975.
~ Output ~) __ Hil Uons_ nf __
1958 Dollars
z.oo-
~-
140-
::Jo-
JZO-
110-
I (>(J -
'Y-
~-
2.0-
. I
Figun. 5
Relationship of Real Personal Income
to Real Output in Support Sector
Industries, Anchorage,
1965-1975
Personal Income
J Thousands of 1967 Dollars
0~ · I I
0 lt:>O %CIO
I
'3&0
25
I
5oo I Bco
Trans.-Comm.-P.U.
7
t !lOt:>
Finance
26
Figure 6 data on the support sector outside of Anchorage demonstrate
----------.fliatT974 ano-r975 again represent a departure from the 1965 to 1973
trend. Transportation-communications-public utilities shows the larg-
est difference from historical trends, mostly as a result of an increase
of 50 percent in "other transportation" employment in the Gulf of Alaska
subregion in 1974, and another 183 percent increase in 1975. The output
data are clearly affected by the pipeline project (see tonnage data in
Table A.6), and projections of the transportation sector would need-a
separate component for local demand and resource development-related
demand.
Trade output has also increased sharply in the Southcentral region,
exclusive of Anchorage, with big percentage increases occurring at both
the wholesale and retail level in 1974 and 1975. It should come as no
surprise that the employment data from the individual census divisions
indicate that large increases have occurred in employment in the Matanuska-
Susitna Borough, the Kenai-Cook Inlet census division, and the Valdez-
Chitina-Whittier census division, with little growth in Cordova-McCarthy
and little or no growth at the wholesale level in Kodiak and Seward. In
the case of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, much of the growth is due to
the development of Wasilla as a retailing center. In the case of Valdez-
Chitina-Whittier, much of the growth is a direct consequence of services
provided as a result of the pipeline project, and in the Kenai Peninsula,
probably the growth is a result of a deepening and maturing economy which
comes with' larger populations.
Services did not keep pace with the increase in personal income
outside of Anchorage between 1973 and 1975. This may be due to the fa~t
that most services such as medical and business services are still
obtained in Anchorage, while hotel, restaurant, and related services
cannot yet be supported by internal business growth. The single ex-
ception was business services in the Valdez-Chitina-Whittier census
0
Real Output
Mi-llions of
1958 Dollars
so-
~o-
:so-
~-
'"-
c 0
lilt>
() 0 0
Figure 6
Relationship of Real Output in Support
Sector Industries to Real Income,
Other Southcentral,
1965-1975
Trans.-Comm.-P.U.
Trade
Services
l
:a:oo
0
I
7()0
0
,.
N . -....!
Personal Income
Thousands of I' 196 7 Dollars
I
• aoo 10~0
28
division, and this is because many pipeline project operations' employees
are counted as employed in the business-serviceif ~sector by -th.e Pep-art.:.
ment of Labor. Again, the evidence suggests that, for projection pur-
poses, the data be divided into local demand and direct demand caused by
large-scale projects such as the pipeline.
State and local government output in non-Anchorage Southcentral, as
measured by state and local government wages and salaries, grew at an
annual average rate of 8.6 percent between 1965 and 1975. The rates of
growth in the periods 1965 to 1973 and 1973 to 1975 were 9.4 percent and
5.6 percent, respectively, appearing to show that the pipeline had
little influence on the growth of this sector outside of Anchorage.
+ndeed, the rate of growth in employment in state and local government
was lower in Kodiak during the pipeline boom than it had been in the
previous eight years: 3.5 percent, as opposed to il.l percent. The Gulf
pf Alaska subregion showed some influence from the pipeline, since the
rate of empl?ym~nt growth in this ~ectqr increased from 6.2 percent to
9~5 percent-~ne&rly all the increase i~ Valdez-Chitina-Whittier census ·, ' . . . ~ '
divi~ion. Within Cook Inlet subregion, all the census divisions except
~nchor~ge sho1:ved a decrease in the rate of growth of state and local
j?;overp.ment einployment after 1973. Figure ~ .demoi?-strates whathappened
. .
over the eptire ~eriod in each subdivisio~. Most areas show an accel-
~ration in the r~te, of growth in e~ployment either in 19~9 or in 1970,
probably reflecting both the expansion of state government after the
frudhoe Bay lease sale (beginning 1970) and the expansion of state
revenue sparing to local governments, especially the School Foundation
Program. The Kodia~-Shelikof subregion shows steady growth, probably a
result of the roughly constant population and slow rate of real per
~apita spending. The Gulf of Alas~a region shows its expected bulge in
~mployment in 1973-1975 as the result o~ the pipeline. 'fhe Matanuska-
Susitna Borough accelerated in 1970 anq sustained the higper pace. This
was probably a coincidence of expanded funqing in 1970~1972 being fol-
. '
lowed by increasing population demands. Kenai-Cook Inlet initially
u
Number of
Persons
/ODO-
800 ...
100 ...
~o.
01 ·-
v
f .
I -
··UJ u u
'Figure 7
State and Local Government Employment,
Selected Southcentral Alaska Subregions,
1965-:-1975
' a I
~ .... .... -·
u 0
-'~
u
I
Kenai-Cook Inlet.
Alaska
Matsu.
Kodiak-
Shelikoi
Seward
30
shows the tail-end of oil expansion, an acceleration in ~970"'-1972 in
probable response to increased funding, steady employment from 1912
to 1974 (estimated resident population shrank from 1971 to 1974), and
a new round of expansion with population increases after 1974. Seward's
resident population was growing until 1968, when it stabilized and began
to fall. This probably accounts for the smaller revenue-induced accelera-
tion in state and local government employment in 1969 and 1970, and the
relatively flat spending pattern after 1970.
0
0
0
-3i
The three study subregions~-Cook Inlet, Gulf of Alaska, and Kodiak-
Shelikof--have economies which depend on different basic sectors and
their 1965-1975 growth reflects these differences. The economic base
of Cook Inlet is essentially threefold. It depends upon local resource - -
development, as exemplified by the operation of the Upper Cook Inlet oil
and gas fields; it depends upon Anchorage's role as a transportation and
financial hub for all of Alaska (except Southeast Alaska for surface
transportation); and it depends upon Anchorage as a regional and state-
wide governmental center. In contrast, both the other subregions cur-
rently depend upon resource development to sustain their economies.
Gulf of Alaska is sustained by local resource development (fisheries and
oil and gas exploration) and the petroleum transshipment facilities at
Valdez. Kodiak depends upon the fisheries and upon federal government
employment in support of fishing and navigation. Summary Tables 9, 10,
and 11 show that the three major economic events in the 1965-1975 period--
development of the Kenai oil and gas fields from 1965 to 1970,_ government
expansion from 1970 to 1973, and pipeline-related development in 1974--
had different effects in each of th,e thre~ supresions.
Table 9 summarizes the changes in Cook Inlet. Anchorage dominates
this subregion, and the maturing of the ~nchorage economy plus its growth
as a statewide service, trade, and financial center both in periods of
rapid growth and in periods of slower growth made the support sector
industries grow faster than the "basic" sector. As a result, the
"basic" sector share of employment (about one-half of whom are federal
government civilian employees) fell from 44 percent of the total in
1965 to 30 percent in 1975. The term "basic" is used in quotation marks,
since several parts of the state government, transportation, communica-
tions, wholesale trade, and services industries are arguably ·part of the
subregion's "export base." However, much more information and analysis
"Basic" Sector
Employment 1 (Number of Persons)
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
Average Annual
Rate of Growth
1965-1970
1970-1973
1973-1975
1965-1975
15,144
15,278
16,169
16,447
16,552
17,193
17,666
17,963
18,147
20,812
23,505
2.6%
L8%
13.8%
4.5%
Table 9
Selected Measures of Growth
Cook Inlet Subregion, 1965-1975
Non-Agricultural
Wage and Salary Real Personal
Employment ·rncome
(Number of Persons) (Million 1967
34,134 442.5
35,761 448.7
38,317 522.6
40,073 555.9
43,578 631.2
47,407 667.3
51,091 716.8
54,329 769.4
57,156 820.8
65,918 943.3
78,389 1129.5
6.8% 8.6%
6.4% 7.1%
17.1% 17.3%
8.7% 9.8%
$)
Populatio~
..,._ (Numper of PeJ!sons)
119,121
123,665
126,376
132,180
137,400
149,428
159,046
167,765
174,280
179,544
209,049
4 •. 6%
5.3%
9.5%
5.4%
1Agriculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Mining, Contract Construction, Manufacturing, Federal Government.
w
N
33
would be required than is currently available to identify the "basic"
·--'--------parts-o-£-these-irrdustr±es-,-on-the-one-hand-,-or-the-stricti:y-local~-_--------~-
serving parts of construction and manufacturing, on the other.
0
0
Examining Table 9, one can see that personal income gains in the
Cook Inlet subregion were consistently larger than employment growth
over the period, which means that many income benefits of increased
employment opportunities were accrued to residents of the subregion.
Employment grew more rapidly than population throughout the period,
indicating the migration of primarily single and childless individuals
to the subregion in search of employment and rising labor force par-
ticipation of residents. Real per capita income rose throughout the
period,·because income rose more rapidly than population. The greatest
jump occurred, not surprisingly, in 1973-1975, reflecting pipeline wages
of residents. This is in spite of the fact that the reporting agency
adjusted the data downward for those pipeline wages which did not remain
in the communities (reportedly around 50 percent).
Table 10, referring to the Gulf of Alaska subregion, shows that the
pattern of employment is closely tied to changes in "basic" sector employ-
ment, and that total employment changes in this region are in the same
direction and about 1.2 -1.6 times as large as employment changes in
the "basic" sector in most years. The data are misleading to some
degree since nonresident fishermen do not appear in the data; nor do
self-employed and family workers in fishing; nor do fishing crew members
before about 1972. However, it is clear that in this subregion the
economy as a whole is much more dep~ndent on the "basic" sector than
in the Cook Inlet subregion. It is also clear that, although over the
whole period per capita real resident personal income increased, many of
the income benefits of the pipeline period went to people who worked in
the region (and were counted as employed in the region), but who were
not residents of the region (and therefore were not counted for income
purposes). Thus, employment grew faster than either income or population.
"Basic" Sector
Employment 1 (Number of Persons)
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
Average Annual
Rate of Growth
1965-1970
1970-1973
1973-1,975
1965-1975
497
575
431
399
524
461
595
482
603
828
3,025
-1.5%
9.3%
224.0%
19.8%
Table 10
Selected Measures of Growth
Gulf of Alaska Subregion, 1965-1975
Non-Agricultural
Wage.and Salary
Employment
(Number of Persons)
1,355
],.,453
1,343
1,284
1,467
1,533
1,742
1,643
1,858
2,423
5,596
2.5%
6.6%
73.5%
15.2%
· Real Personal
Income
(Million 1967 $)
14.5
15.2
16.2
17.2
17.4
21.3
23.0
22~8
. 26.0
30.4
66.4
8.0%
6.9%
59.8%
16.4%
Populatio !,
'I (Number of Petsons)
4,387
4,405
4,369
4,400
4,540
4,955
4,862
5,326
5,550
5,793
11,642
2.5%
3.9%
44.8%
10.3%
il
:1
1Agriculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Mining, Contract Construction, Manufacturing, Federal Govern~ent.
0
0
35
The fact that employment growth was concentrated in the "basic" sector
(mainly construction) can be seenby comparing the basic-sector and·
total employment growth in the two left-hand columns of the table.
The Kodiak-Shelikof subregion's experience is summarized in Table 11.
In comparison with the other two tables~ one is struck by the relatively
low rate of growth in personal income, declines in population~ and the
low (sometimes negative) rate of employment growth. Even the relatively
strong showing in the "basic" sector between 1970 and 1973 is partly a
statistical quirk. The extension of coverage to fishermen under unem-
ployment insurance in 1972 caused the estimate of agriculture-forestry-·
fisheries ~mployment to increase from 123 to 402 in one year. Much of
the rest of basic employment is in manufacturing (mainly canning and
fish processing), which accounts for the cyclical nature of both basic
and total employment in this subregion. This economy is heavily depen-
dent on the basic sector: in 1965, 64 percent of all wage and salary
employees were in the basic sector, and in 1975, the percentage was
still 55 percent. There are two somewhat offsetting trends in Kodiak
basic employment. On the one hand, federal civilian employment has
fallen by more than 50 percent sinc;e 1965--from 541 to 269, or from
about 1 in 4 jobs in the Kodiak economy to 7 percent, or less than
1 in 10. On the other hand, the traditionally cyclical food manufactur-
ing industry increased from 618 to 1,134, or from 1 in 4 jobs to 1 in 3.
Kodiak has increasingly become a one-industry economy qependent upon
fishing, while the other two subregions have diversified economically.
Job creation in Kodiak is increasingly dependent on growth in the fish-
ing industry. The relative lack of stable economic opportunity and the
decline in federal (military-related) employment may account for the
estimated population declines. Since the gain in total employment is
larger than the gain in personal incomes and is associated with esti-
mated net population decreases, then either real wage rates are falling~
which reduces income gains, or much of the income earned in the region
goes to people who are not residents of the subregion. The latter seems
the more likely explanation.
"Basic" Sector
Employment 1 (Number of Persons)
1965
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
.Average Annual
Rate of Growth
1965-1970
1970-1973
1973-1975
1965-1975
1,483
1,678
1,760
1,505
1,228
1,206
1,205
1,4.53
2,067
2,006
2,045
-4.1%
19 .• 7%
-0.5%
3.3%
Table 11
S.elected Measures of Growth
~odiak-Shelikof· Subregi.on, 1965-1975
Non-Agricultural
Wage and Salary
Employment
... ·.(Number of Persons)
2,310
2, 710
2,876
2,650
2,395
2,469
2,619
2,878
3,576
3,641
3,802
1.3%
13.1%
3.1%
5.1%
Real Personal
Income
(Million 1967
32.6
32.9
33.7
35.2
37.6
41.7
44.2
37.5
48.0
49.1
50.9
5.0%
4.8%
3.0%
4.6%
$)
Population
(Number of Per$ons)
9,064
8,479
9,478
9,520
9,870
9,409
9,665
8,645
8,868
9,232
8,801
0.7%
-2.0%
-0.4%
-0.3%
1Agriculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Mining, Contract Construction, Manufacturing, Federal Government.
0
0
0
0
37
Age-Sex Distribution of the Population
The distribution of the population among age and sex categories
is important insofar as it provides planning guidance on the probable
demands for public services (e.g. schools versus Pioneers' Homes) and
recreation opportunities (family motorhome camping and boating versus
long-range hiking and kayaking, for example). Furthermore; it provides
a benchmark for estimating the future natural increase in the population.
The data available suggest that the faster growing areas in the region
have gotten an increased concentration of working-age civilian popula-
tion, accompanied by a relative decline in school~age population compared
to 1970. Slow-growing areas such as Seward show a steep decline in the
proportion of school-age population, a decline in the percentage of young
(age 20-29) working-age population, and an increase in the proportion of
older persons. If the results can be extended to the whole region, this
suggests that rapidly growing areas will gain young adults, slow-growing
areas will lose them, but that increases in young adults will not neces-
sarily mean a corresponding increase in children.
Only fragmentary data are available on the age-sex distribution of
the population of Southcentral Alaska since the 1970 Census of Population.
The data from the Census appear in Table 12. · The features worth noting
are the relatively large number of young, working age individuals of both
sexes, and especially young men aged 20 to 24, reflecting the military
presence, in Cook Inlet and Kodiak-Shelikof subregions especially, but also
construction and fishing employment. The Gulf of Alaska subregion had
the oldest distribution, with 31.7 percent of the population over 40 years
old. Cook Inlet had the youngest, with 14.5 percent; while Kodiak-Shelikof
had the intermediate age distribution, with 19.8 percent.
Some fragmentary data are available on Anchorage population from a
household survey conducted by the Anchorage Urban Observatory in the summer·
and fall of 1975. About 650 households were selected utilizing a cluster
Tabl~ 12
Age-Sex Distribution of the Resident Population,
Southcentral Alaska, 1970
Cook Inlet Subregion Gulf of'Alaska Subregion Kodiak-Shelikof Subregion
Age Male % 1 Female % Male % . Female % Male % Female %
0-1 1,743 1 1,680 1 58 1 51 1 124 1 132 1.
1-4 6,163 4 5,889 4 200 4 167 3 432 5 385 4
5-9 9,082 6 8, 778 6 285 6 161 3 609 6 544 6
10-14 8,813 6 8,436 6 285 15 278 6 478 5 455 5
15-19 6,488 4 6,286 4 220 4 201 4 468 5 333 4
20-24 9,129 6 6,800 5 165. 3 156 3 925 10 455 5.
25-29 6,754 5 6,680 5 182 4 181 4 482 5 418 4 .w.
():)•
30-34 5,896 4 5,717 4 212 4 140 3 412 4 323 3
35-39 5,931 4 5,178 4 187 4 152 3 317 3 253 3
40-44 5,142 3 4,278 3 203 3 145 3 305 3 197 2
45-49 4,287 3 3,806 3 184 4 146 3 239 3 165 2
50-54 3,298 2 2, 724 2 170 3 140 3 209 2 147 2
55-59 2,175 1. 1,696 1 142 3 88 2 143 2 100 1
.60-64 1,226 1 1,055 1 107 2 58 1 91 1 60 l
65 + 12375 1 12132 1. 124 3 ~-1 133 1 77 1
77,502 52% 70,135 48% 2, 726 55% 2,229 45% 5,365 57% 4,044 43%
lPercent of total population in the subregion. May not add to total because of rounding errors.
Source: 1970 Census of Population: PC(l) -B3, Table 35.
0
39
housing area probability sample from the entire Anchorage census division
except the military bases. Table 13 compares the age dlsLrlbutlun~in this
sample with the non~military base population of the 1970 Census. While
the age groupings in the sample and the Census are slightly different,
and the area sample in 1975 may have undercounted multiple family housing
residents, it does appear that, at a minimum, the young adult population.
has increased substantially in comparison with school-age population.
The relative number of older persons may also have increased.
The Urban Observatory also did a series of age-sex distributions
for the Kenai Borough in August and September 1976 in conjunction with
the study Profile of Five Kenai Peninsula Towns, published in 1977.
Pooling the sample populations, one is able to estimate the 1976 popu-
lation-age distributions for the Seward and Kenai-Cook Inlet census
divisions, which are reported in Table 14. Also shown in Table 14 are
the closest comparable figures for the 1970 Census. Table 14 shows
that, provided the sample populations are representative of the census
division populations, Seward's population has gotten significantly older
(compatible with observations of low employment growth in the census
division). On the other hand, there bas been an apparent increase in
the number of young adults relative to the number of children in the
Kenai-Cook Inlet subdivision, consistent with the findings for the
Anchorage census division and the rapid growth in employment oppor-
tunities in both areas.
Finally, we consider the population of the Valdez-Chitina-Whittier
census divisions. Dr. Michael Baring-Gould and Marsha Bennett of the
Department of Sociology of the University of Alaska-Anchorage conducted
a census in Valdez in July 1975. There are no equivalent data for the
rest of the census division or for the pipeline camp population, but
since similar changes likely occurred in the Glennallen area and the
camp population was temporary, one may get some indication. of the direc-
tion of the "permanent" population distribution shifts between 1970 and
40
Table 13
Anchorage Census Division
Age Distribution of Non-Military Base Population
Percent of 1975 Sample Percent of 1970 Census Population
Age Percent Age Percent
0-4 9.5 0-4 10.4
5-14 19.8 5-14 23.5
15-30 34.1 15-29 28.1
30-40 15.3 31-39 15.5
40-50 11.9 40-49 12.4
50-64 7.3 50-64 8.6
65 + 2.1 65 + 1.5
Sources: Patricia L. Dolezal and Richard L. Ender, 1976 Population
Profile, Municipality of Anchorage, September 1976.
1970 Census of Population PC(l) -B3, Table 35.
0
()
0
0
41
Kenai-Cook Inlet and Seward Census Divisions:
Age Distribution of the Population~ 1970 and 1976
Kenai-Cook Inlet:
1976 1970
Age Percent Age Percent
0-9 17.8 0-9 23.4
10-19 20.8 10-19 22.0
20-29 18.8 20-29 15.4
30-39 18.8 30-39 15.5
40-49 12.0 40-49 12.4
50-59 7.1 50-59 7.4
60 + 4.8. 60 + 4.0
Seward:
1976 1970
Age Percent Age Percent
'
0-9 6.0 0-9 18.4
10-19 4.0 10-19 19.8
20-29 9.8 20-29 13.5
30-39 12.8 30-39 11.3
40-49 13.1 40-49 14.0
50-59 18.7 50-59 12.5
60 + 35.6 60 + 10.7
Sources: Hitchins, et al, A Profile of Five Kertai Peninsula Towns, 1977.
1970 Census of Population PC(l) -B3~ Table 35.
42
1975. The 1975 and 1970 distributions are reported in Table 15. The
table indicates that, even excluding the pipeline camp population, there
has probably been an increase in the working-age population relative to
the 1970 Census for Valdez-Chitina-Whittier. This seems to be confirmed
when the 1975 Valdez Census is combined with employment and population
growth data supplied by the Department of Labor.
In summary, in most of the census divisions and areas for which more
recent data than the 1970 Census exists, it appears that the young, work-
ing age population has increased dramatically relative to older workers
and children. The exception is Seward, whose population distribution may
have gotten/older since the 1970 Census. In general, it appears that, as
elsewhere, places experiencing strong economic growth tend to draw a
young, working-age population, while low-growth areas are populated by
the older workers, retirees, and the very young.
)
J
0
43
Table 15
Valdez-Chitina-Whittier Census Division:
Age Distribution of. the Population
1975 (Valdez Only) and 1970· ·
1975 1970.
Non-Camp Population, Valdez Valdez-Chitina-Whittier
Age Percent Age Percent
0-4 7.3 0-;-4 9.6
5-12 13.3 5-12 14.8
13-18 9.9 13-18 12.5
19-65 68.6 19-64 44.4
65 + 0.8 65 + 3.5
Sources: Valdez Census, July 1975: ."Summary of Final Valdez Census,
July, 1975."
1970 Census of Population, PC(l) -B3, Table 35.
44
Summary: 1965 to 1975
Three major economic events occurred during the years 1965 to 1975
which influenced the growth of the Southcentral Alaska economy. The
first was the development of the Upper Cook Inlet oil and gas fields~
which diversified the Cook Inlet subregional economy and caused strong
economic growth in this subregion and Anchorage's growth as a trade and
financial center. The second was the sale of Prudhoe Bay leases, which
led to growth in state and local government in all areas and the in-
creased development of Anchorage as a governmental center. The third
was the Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline project, which caused a boom in popula-
tion and construction in Valdez and Anchorage, with population spillover
effects into the Matanuska Valley and Kenai Peninsula, and important
development effects in the Anchorage support sector.
It seems clear from recent history that further economic develop-
ment in Alaska, regardless of whether it takes place in the region or
not~ will increasingly affect_Anchorage •. It also seems clear that as
Anchorage grows, the demands of its population will increasingly cause
secondary economic changes of the sort now being experienced in the
Matanuska-Susitna Borough. Planning for the actual shape of Southcentral
regional development in the future is uncertain, because much will depend
upon the rate of development of natural resources not yet discovered and
because much will also depend upon governmental (primarily state govern-
ment) spending decisions not yet made. Therefore, the next chapter
describes two hypothetical scenarios or sets of informed guesses con-
cerning future development. Obviously, these are guesses; however, in
combination they are intended to provide planning guidance as to the
likely upper and lower bounds of economic development in Southcentral
Alaska through the end of the century.
0
·. 45
CHAPTER 2
METHODOLOGY AND DATA USED IN PROJECTING
------------,SOUTHCENTRAL ALAS-KA'-S ECONOMY-, T97S-:m-z-5---~-------------
This chapter describes the methodology and data used to project
high and low growth of.Southcentral Alaska's economy and population on
a Sl!bregional basis from the base year of 1975 to the year 2025. The
methodology involved the use of a statewide and regional econometric
model to ,provide regional control total projections between 1975 and
2000. Less formal techniques were used to estimate the subregional
distribution of economic activity and population and to project the path
of employment and population after the year 2000. The data required to
run the model were provided by various members of the economics task
force, the assumptions were reviewed by the task force, and the model
outputs and tentative projections were reviewed for internal consistency
and plausibility by ISER researchers and by the task force.
The chapter is organized as follows: The next section describes the
econometric models used, together with their strengths and limitations
in the task for which they were used. The second section discusses the
data required to do an econometric forecast of the Southcentral economy
and population, with the actual assumptions relegated to Appendix B.
The third section describes the assumptions and justifications used to
disaggregate the regional control totals into projections, for the Cook
Inlet, Gulf of Alaska, and Kodiak-Shelikof subregions. The fourth and
final,' section discusses the techniques used to project the subregipnal
results after the year 2000.
46
The Econometric Models
The State Model
The method used to project the path of the Southcentral regional
economy employed two econometric models. The first was a modification
of the ISER Alaska state econometric model. The second was a version of
ISER's regional ·econometric model which used outputs of the state model,
and which was modified to simulate only the economies of Anchorage and
the remainder of the Southcentral part of the state. This modification
was done to reduce the requirements for data in other regions of the
state and to reduce the cost of simulation.
A diagram of the modified statewide model is shown in Figure 8.
The basic structure of the model is as follows: The model is divided
into exogenous or "basic" sectors and endogenous or-"nonb"asic" sectors.
In the exogenous sectors, level of output is assumed to be determined
by factors outside the state'·s economy. The endogenous, "nonbasic"
sector's primary reason for existence is to serve local Alaska markets
rather than export markets; therefore, the level of output is determined
within the model primarily as a function of Alaska real disposable income_.
There are some industries whose output is determined by a mix of forces
related to export-base markets and local Alaska markets. The most im-
portant of these is construction, part of which is involved in the
building of pipelines, seafood processing plants, etc., which serve
export markets, and part of which serves (or can be explained by) growth
in Alaska's economy and population. Many versions of the state model
contain a large block of equations determining state and local govern~
ment revenues and, using simple expenditure rules, the level of state
and local employment, payroll, and capital spending. This was not done
in the version used ·for two reasons. First, the level of expenditures
and the resulting model output ordinarily are quite sensitive to the
expenditure rule adopted, and the task force did not feel that they
could forecast future budgets. However, they did have some confidence
u
Al
0 () () 0 u u 0
.· .. ·'· ENDOGENOUS SECTORS
EXOGENous· SECTORS
Output, . l
Endogenous Exogenous
. , Construction ... r--·Transpor'tation, I--s·ervices
! H Output I Endogenous 1-
Construct·ion 1L,..:,~--------------l Construction " .. ·
Employment .,:,· __ ;rl Employment, 1.4 H Output, 1 ..
I" "'----.-----!· ···:'~.--__ Transportation r Transportation
. J
H Output, ]
Ag, Forest, Fish
Employment
Construction ·
Employment
Exogenous H Construction
---.--......,J ~---\
Agriculture,
Forestry, Fisheriesr--L--~~----~)'
Employment
H Employment, 'rl"'--1 Output, l~-----1
Services I t Services j'
'--------J
H Employment, k,H 'output, ~1 .. :_ __ -1
Communicationsj-Communications
~+------'
~State
J Local Govt • ._ ~--'1\..-.J r-r L Employment J ~ I r
Output, ~--------i Employment, · -U Output, '-t~---1
& Local Govt. j Wholesale Trade
1
j'Wholesale Trade 1"
H Output, -L
Federal Govt, ~
H Output, I
Manufacturing_!
I I State Govt. 11----fT\-~I L Employment r i'-+-. H
·Federal Civilian
and
Military Employment
I~
~--------If E~ployment, l Output, 141.'-o---l "-_ . _. ! R~tail Trade J Retail Trade
--~----------~ Employment, Output,
"t'-------1 '-' "--Finance, Insurance, LL._ r Finance, Insurance, ~·--~
Real Estate Real Estate
I Manufacturing
Employment J'.____,.. .. _ ----· ,..,.~. ·
._ ~------il Employment, -~H Output, · k'
r jPublic Utilities Public Utilities ,t--" ,_
l'f----41 Output 'It'-l ___ -1
u (J.)
Total
Population
Military h
'----?!
Exogenous
Construction
Employment
Native ~
Natural Increase I
l
Native
Population
Non-Native
Natural Increase
'.
Civilian,
I Non-Native,
~------~-~ ~ Nonconstruction
Pop·alntion
i
Net
Migration
U.S. Real H
Per Capita Income
'--------1 --~
Real Disposable
Personal Income
j Mining I Mining I Employment_j~-._----~--~ 1~-----t '---~ r---r=~====~-----~· l
I u. s. 1 j Disposable l t Personal Income
Total Output .......
Figure 8 I
aska State Econometric Model, Total I Version SG4.SC Employment '---
NC?minal wages _r
Tax I ·'
Computation I· 'I ·
I ~ I Alaska J-~~---~u_. __ s_._~~-----~ Person~tn1;come 1----~ "' .. Real Wages _ 'I
U, .S.
Prices
J
Alaska
Consumer Prices
Alaska Wage Rates
(Each Sector)
.'1' i
Al.asl<:s W~ges
and Salaries
(Each Sector)
T
u
48
in projecting high and low overall government employment growth. Second,
whFJ,tever model was used, it was necessary to estimatP. government employ-
ment growth at the subregional level anyway, there being no method within
the model to estimate subregional employment-in state and local govern-
ment. Therefore, the unessential sections of the fiscal model were
disabled, and exogenous estimates of government employment and capital
expenditures were directly introduced into the model.
The basic (primarily export) industries in the model are mining
(which includes oil and gas); agriculture, forestry (SIC code 8 only--
most of what is usually thought of as "forestry" is actually included
in lumber and wood products),2 fisheries; food manufacturing (primarily
seafood processing); lumber and wood· products; pulp and paper manufac-
turing; "other" manufacturing (mostly petrochemicals and refining); the
export-base component of construction; and government. For these indus-
tries, an estimate must be made outside the model of the dollar value of
output and level of employment for each year of the projection period.
The nonbasic .. industries.are transportation, communications, public
utilities; wholesale .. and retail trade; finance, insurance, and real
estate; and services. For these industries, the level of output is
determined by an equation which. has real disposable personal income as
the principal explanatory variable. The level of employment in the
industry is then determined as a function of output in the industry,
which in effect summarizes the workings of the labor market in that
sector. "Wage rates"--real annual wages per worker--are determined as
a function of the U.S. private weekly real wage. This captures the
effect of Alaska's having an open labor market whose wage rates will be
2 standard Industrial Classification Manual, Executive Office of the
President, Office of Management and Budget, 1972. This reference docu-
ment contains the standard U.S. methodology used to classify firms into
industries, and is used by most state departments of labor, including
Alaska. Alaska does keep track of government separately, as earlier
versions of the manual direct. .
49
influenced by the income alternatives available to workers elsewhere.
--t-~~~~~~~ln~J>_m~~Rdll_S_ti_i5:_S th.e ratio of construction and mining_emRlQYl!li~Jl.t _ t,o,____~--~--
total wage and salary employment is added to capture the effect which
0
0
large-scale resource development such as the trans-Alaska oil pipeline
has on wages of workers in closely related industries such as trans-
portation.· Wages and salaries are then estimated for all industries
from employment and wage rates, a series of equations computes an
estimate of income taxes. These are deducted from income while nonwage
income is ad,ded, to arrive at an estimate of disposable personal income.
Income then feeds back into the output equations of the nonbasic sectors,
so that total output and total income are arrived at simultaneously in
each forecast year.
Population is then determined in the state model in a series of steps.
·The model uses age-sex-race specific survival rates and age-race specific
fertility rates for the female non-Native,civilian population to project
births, deaths, and natural increase in the civilian population. To this
is added an estimate of civilian net migration, which is determined by
the change in civilian employment opportunities and the difference be-
tween real per capita income in Alaska and the United States as a whole.
Migration is distributed by age and sex among the various population
cohorts using 1970 census migration rates and age-sex proportions of
. migrating populations. The Native population is treated in a similar
way, except that they are assumed not to migrate into or out of the
state. Finally, an exogenous estimate of the military population is
added to get total population.
The Regional Model
The regional model which works in a similar fa~hion, is portrayed
in Figure 9. The regional model provides additional geographic detail
by describing the Alaskan economy as a group of loosely integrated
regional economies rather than as a single unit, but certain sectors
of the Anchorage regional economy are influenced by statewide economic
State Jol,>d.,t Outputs:
50
• Exo~l!noutt Cont~truct1on·
y Empluym,.nt ..
• Mining Employment
e·Total Employment . .
lL • Civilian Non-Native
Output-r ..
Population 1• Mining Output
e.Total Population • Communications
I • Alaska Prices I
....... ~-
Anchorage Economy: Other Southcentral Econom!::
Exogenous Endogenous Endogenous Exogenous
Sectors Sectors Sectors Sectors
• Agr., Forest, Fish. • Endog. Construction e-Endog. Construction • Agr., Forest, Fish.
• Mining ··Transportation, Air • Trans par tat ion-, Air • Mining
• Exogenous Construction • Transporta~ion, Other • Transportation, • Exogenous .Construction
• Food Manufacturin$ • Public Utilities Other (part) • Food Manufacturing
• Lumber & Wood Mfg. • Cocmunications • Public Utilities • Lumber & Wood Mfg.
• Pulp & Paper Mfg. ~ ~ (part)
Pulp & Paper Mfg. • Wholesale Trade • Communications •
• Other Manufacturing • Retail Trade • Wholesale Trade • Other Manufacturing
• Fin~ce. Insurance_, • Retail Trade • Federal Gove~nt
Real .Estate • State Government
• Services • Finance, Insurance.
Real Estate • Local Government
1 ~ Services _(part) • Exogenous Transport.
Employment, t • Exogenous Pub. Utilities
Output for I I • Exogenous· Services Each Sector Output, I Output, Each Sector Each Sector + ~ t Employment,
I Output for Employment, I l Employment, Each Sector Each Sector Each Sector J -+--~ Anchorage ~ .t. Other Southcentral
~ Wage Rates, w-Wage Rates, !(. • ~ · Anchorage ["---? ·~ Other Southcentral Each Sector Each Sector Wages and Salaries
& Proprietor Incoce Wages and Salaries
J & Proprietor Income
r Transfers I I J Transfers I I rt .f I
Anchorage Other Southcentral Wage & Salary
\ Wage·& Salary & Proprietor & Proprietor Income + Transfers Income + Transfers -
~ ·-I Anchorage I Other Southcentralj
Total Employment Total Employment Other Southcentral Anchorage Initial M.!!!!. Civilian, Non-Native, Civilian, Non-Native, -~ Non-Exogenous Non-Exogenous Constr. Pop. Constr. Pop. State CNNP to (CNNP) (CNNP) Non-Exogenoua
Construction Exogenous Construction ~ r--f Exogenous Construction I Employment
+
Employment
Employment ~ -!,. ' J Anchorage Other
CNNP ..... Southcentral
CNNP
:-'" Native Figure 9 Native ~ Increase Incro;aBe r I I federal I t Federal Alaska Southcentral Region .!. I Military Mllitnry J
Jiatlve I Econometric Model~ I Native
Population II I Version REGSC4 I i'opulatlon
I
AnchoriiY.e -~ Other Southc•·ntralJ Populntlon l'opulatlon ..
0
0
51
growth rather than just local growth: For each regional economy, as for
the state model, there must be exogenous estimates of output and employ-
ment in each basic industry. The model then annually estimates output,
employment, and wages and salaries in each nonbasic industry, with
regional output in each nonbasic industry a function of the sum of real
nonmining and nonconstruction wages and salaries paid in the region. Non-
mining, nonconstruction wages serve as a proxy for local real income in
estimating output in the support sector.
Certain nonbasic industries have been measurably influenced by
factors other than local demand. For example, non-air transportation
in nother Southcentraln was strongly influenced by petroleum develop-
ment on the Kenai Peninsula. This is captured in the specification of
the model by making output in Other Southcentral's transportation (other
than air transportation) industry a function of nonmining and mining
wages and salaries. Communications industry output in each region seems
to be not as well explained historically by local income changes as by
expansion in the statewide communications network, itself a function of
statewide incomes. Therefore, local communications output and employ-
ment were projected using the statewide total output as an explanatory
variable. In Anchorage, statistically significant nonlocal influences
were found in the output of air transportation, wholesale trade, and
retail trade. In Anchorage air transportation and \V"holesale trade, the
specification of'the output equation used statewide personal income and
mining sector output as explanatory variables. In retail trade, the
more complex causative factor mix was estimated using a decaying function
of time and local wages to depict the important but declining influence on
the retail sector of the maturing of the Anchorage economy.
The regional model initially estimates total employment by industry
in a fashion similar to that employed in the state model by summarizing
the labor market for each industry in (usually) a single equation relat-
ing employment to real output. However, in both models, a series of
52
consistency conditions are imposed upon these first-round estimates.
The period since latatehood has been one characterized by the rapid
maturing of the Alaskan economy--increasing availability of retail
trade, wholesale trade, finance, insurance, and real estate, and busi~
ness, medical, and personal services in Alaska--particularly Anchorage.
Because the period during which the output equations were estimated is
this period of rapid maturation of the economy, it appeared possible
that the estimated equations might overestimate the growth of these
sectors in the future when the economy was relatively mature (that is,.
offering the range of services offered in the United States as a whole).
Consequently, in the state model, employment 'in trade, finance-insurance-
real estate, and services was constrained to be no greater a proportion
o.f total wage and salary employment than it is in the economy of the
United States as a whole, and total output was adjusted accordingly.
The constraints were not binding until nearly the end of the century.
The situation varied somewhat in the regional model. Because the Anchor-
age economy is the most mature in the state, similar constraints, adjusted
for Anchorage's share of these sectors in the state economy, were imposed
:Ln Anchorage. However, growth in the rest of Southcentral Alaska's non-
basic employment was left unconstrained, since it is likely that the
infilling and mat~r{ng which may occur i~ this economy should be well
represented by the regional equations e~timated for the historical
period.
Population was more difficult to estimate in the regional model
than in the state model. This is because there is no good estimate or
understanding of the process of intrastate migration in Alaska. The
procedure which was followed was to break the total population into its
non-Native civilian, Native civilian, and military components. Begin-
ning with the starting date, civilian non-Native population not employed
on large construction projects was estimated using a weighted average
population-to-employment ratio that had as arguments the previous year's
J
J
)
)
53
regional estimate of the ratio of this component of population-to-
employment (exclud:ing exogenous. construction employment), an~ _t:_h~ ______________ _
equivalent statewide ratio. The method implicitly distributes inter-
state migration to Alaska across the state by allowing both the existing
population/employment ratio and changes in the state ratio resulting
from migration to determine the new population in each region. Native
population was assumed to grow at its historic average--about 2 percent
per year. Finally, military and exogenous construction employment were
added to produce an estimate of total population.
Strengths and Limitations.
The models described above have several strengths and limitations
which must be kept in mind when examining the output results. Among the
principal strengths are that these models capture the essence of the
Alaska growth process--i.e., that export-base industries and government
create jobs in the local economy both directly through hiring, and in-
directly through construction, purchases, and the personal incomes of
workers and profits of Alaska~owned firms. These incomes in turn form
the base of a local economy, the demand for whose goods and services
i:ncreas~s w;i..th increased incomes, which creates demand for still more
·jobs in support industries. Finally, since Alaska is a relatively small
labor market with a mobile labor force, the models primarily relate
Alaskan real wages to U.S. real wages while permitting labor produc-
tivity, local demand for labor, and consumer prices to influence salaries.
Compared to an economic base model, the econometric specification of
this type is preferred because ittcaptures the dynamics of relative
growth of industries. The economic base model is best at projecting the
effects of marginal changes in existing industries and imposes the con-
straint that changes in support sector employment be proportional to
changes in the basic sector employment, thus missing the feedback effect
of growth in the support sector and the cha?ging responsiveness over
time among the support sector industries. Compared to static input-
output models, the econometric approach enjoys the advantage that it
54
implicitly captures the evolutionary changes which occur over time in
the input-output coefficients as the vector of f.J.nal demands increases.
While the input-output approach more precisely defines the interindustry
flows of purchases of goods and services, it is a true representation of
the economy only in the period in which the matrix was estimated. To
the extent that the matrix coefficients'are· changing over time, a dynamic
approach which permits change in the purchases and sales of one sector to
another per dollar of final output·has an advantage over.the static approach.
A truly dynamic I-0 framework might do this if it could be built, but it
would be unnecessarily expensive in an economy like Alaska's, with its
few important interindustry purchases and rapidly changing structure.
The econometric approach captures the historic evolutionary changes in
industry importance anq projects this evolution into the future.
As a practical matter, there are some limitations to the approach
and actual models us~d. In the first place, no model captures very well
revolutionary changes in industry structure which violate the initial
assumptions upon which the model is built, unless the structural change
can be foreseen and incorporated by some alteration imposed by the
modeler. The development of major export-base manufacturing outside of
lumbering, pulp and paper, and fish processing, together with secondary
support services and goods-producing industries, is an example of such
a change which would violate the assumptions that most service industry
growth in Alaska can be attributed to (or explained by) local income.
Nonevolutionary changes in the fundamental character of industries (e.g.
sudden dominant development of different types of firms paying much
higher or lower wages than traditional firms in a given sector) could
also cause trouble. Accordingly, one must recognize th.at it was impos-
sible to take into account all the possible changes in the Alaskan
economy which could result from, for example, development of whole new
industries such as large-scale trawl fisheries within fishing. Pur-
chase of nontraditional services by ·a projected new industry in Alaska
could bias the total employment projections produced by the model, but
J
55
combined with new industry employment structure and worker earnings, the
overall effect is unclear. If inoustry reguirements were ~ell~worked
out, this might be one case in which dynamic 1-0 analysis would give
some better answers than econometric models. Secondly, the further. one
extends the underlying model structure into the future, and the more
precise one must be about the location of economic activity, the less
likely one can expect to be "right." Consequently, results for 1985
are more likely to be correct than results for 1995, other things equal,
while·projections for the region are more likely to be correct than.
those for any subregion. This latter assertion is particularly true
since the geographical allocation of basic economic activity and its
timing are currently very uncertain and decisions of the economic task
force to allocate this activity for projection purposes had to be' arbi-
trary, at lea~t to some extent. Thus, while one mi~ht be fairly certain
of the level of employment in oil and gas, one cannot be as certain of
~he location of work, of the workers' salaries, or work rules related to
time off, all of which would play a crucial role in their choice of
Fesi4ence and the geographic distribution of support services.
It.must be noted that due to time constraints on this project,
the state and regional models used were not estimated ove~ the same
time period. The state model had been updated using data from the
historical period 1961 to 1976 at the time this project began. However,
the historical period for tpe regional model was 1965 to 1973, updates
not having been done for the period since 1973. The regional model was
altered sofitewhat to account for this fact by changing the intercept
coefficients of key output equations with shift coefficients so that
these equations passed through the last real data point. This procedure
is equivalent to assuming for the regional economies that the 1965-1973
:J_ncome elasticity of demand for the output of the support sectors is
unchanged and that the. unusual alterations in output level caused by
the 197.4-76 pipeline boom were a once-only phenomenon now built into
the economy, probably not an unreasonable position to take. Since
56
insufficient post-pipeline data is available to say whether or in what
~---~-~~manner~he-un-d"er:i:y±ng-llln-d-ef -re'iat~±onsh±-p·s~may~have.~-change·d~dur:i:rrg ·-:t~74~·--·C"-· ~~~~~
1976, and since only a few variables from the statewide were used to
calibrate the regional runs, we are unable to say exactly what effect
a complete update might have had on the model results.
Finally, it should be noted that both the regional high and low
projections presented for 1975 to 2000 in the following chapter are
contingent projections. That is, they correctly project the path of
the economy on the conditions that: 1) the model structure estimated
for the historical period, together with incorporated changes designed
to reflect anticipated structural changes in the economy and imposed
consistency conditions, adequately reflects the path of future struc-
tural change in the economy; and 2) that the exogenously imposed assump-
tions reflecting conditions not determined within the Alaskan economy
are all correct as to level, timing, and geographic .distribution~ The
unlikelihood of the latter feature ever being whol~y true is why this
report emphasizes that the projections are primarily illustrative of
general levels of development, given the assumptions. We turn now to
those assumptions.
0
57
Assumptions Used to Produce Economic
and Population Projections, 1975-2000
The use of the ecQnometric model requires a set of assumptions
related to the level and timing of development in the Alaskan economy
and the Southcentral regional economy. The assumptions primarily consist
of time series on employment and output in certain of the export-base
industries and in government. The critical assumptions are organized
into two scenarios which consist of all low-range assumptions taken
together and, alternatively, all high-ra~ge assumptions taken together.
The scenarios were intended to show a "reasonable" high and "reasonable"
low development series of projects which together would offer about the
broadest range of employment and population outcomes which could be
foreseen. This does not mean that the task force predicts that all or
any of the projects assumed will occur; on the contrary, there is a
highly variable degree of uncertainty with respect to the level and
timing of all developments in the scenarios. However, some projects
were subjectively rated more likely than others, some unlikely, and some
very unlikely. Task force consensus assigned most: of the more likely
projects to the low development scenario, some of the less likely to the
high development scenario, and the remainder were assumed not to occur
within the time horizon of the study.
The resulting low and high scenarios should not be considered syno-
nyms for the terms "minimum" and "maximum" development, nor for the terms
"environmental quality" and "net economic development." The task force
did not feel competent to say what the theoretical minimum or maximum
possible level of economic development in Southcentral Alaska might be,
since this could be influenced by government policy at federal, state,
and local levels and by market developments beyond the power of anyone
to predict at this time; nor would that exercise have been of much use
to planners. The terms "environmental quality" and "net economic
development" refer to planning objectives in level B studies for which
resource management strategies are devised. While such strategies, if
58
actually implemented, might result in outcomes which look very much
like the high and low scenarios, the economic task force could not take
the unformulated strategies into account; nor were they asked.
The assumptions are organized by industry and discussed in the
text. The actual.numbers for employment appear in Appendix B.
Agriculture
Agriculture is currently a marginal industry in Alaska, employing
about a thousand people statewide (depending upon the definition of
part-time, family help, and proprietors). In Southcentral Alaska,
about 115 man-years per year are expended in agriculture. Under a
set of very favorable public policy decisions and favorable markets,
considerable further development might occur. Primary requirements
include: public priority given to agricultural production in Alaska
at the same level as petroleum, minerals, and marine products; active
pursuit of statutes and programs to reserve and preserve agricultural
lands; and public aid to innovative settlement and development techniques.
In this case, the agricultural experts on the task fore~ could foresee
possible commercial agricultural employment of around 800 man-years in
Southcentral Alaska per year, and about 4,600 statewide by the year 2000,
' rising to 6,900 by 2025. This reflects the current emphasis on develop-
ment of the Tanana Valley, rather than Southcentral area. Total state-
wide sales of agricultural products in the high case rise to about
$400 million (1975 dollars) per year in the year 2000, and to about
$500 million in 2025. Value of output in constant 1972 dollars rises
to $78 million by 2000, about $12.9 million from Southcentral. By the
end of the study period in the high case, about 1.06 million acres would
be cultivated for crops, and 5.2 million acres of range land utilized.
(Currently, about 20,000 acres are used for crops and grass in the
state, about 12-13 thousand in Southcentral.)
.:J
9
59
In the low case, public priority is given to "national" an:d."public"
int~~est. :in a~st]:letic, recreational, subsistence, and wilderness values, ___ -------
tending to reduce the amount of land available for crops and reducing
the access and usability of land for agriculture. In addition, P';lblic
agricultural agencies and institutions which support agriculture are
allowed to atrophy. In this case, with market conditions continuing to
be unfavorable to Alaskan agriculture, the Southcentral industry output
and commercial agricultural employment drops to zero,, as the land· is
subdivided for homesites and recreational use. Value of commercial
output drops to zero by 1991, with only "amenity" (part-time, partly.
subsistence) output remaining.
Forestry
Aggregated in state statistics under Agriculture-Forestry-Fisheries,
this is a tiny component of the forest products industry which employs
about 22 people statewide in tree farms, nurseries, timber cruisi~g, re-
forestation, and pest control; and it is more fittingly placed with agri-
culture than with the rest of the forest products industry. Employment
in logging, for example, occurs in Lumber and Wood Products Manufacturing.
In the high case, the forestry sector grows in proportion to growth in
the rest of the forest products group, lumber and wood products. In the
low case, it stays at current levels.
Fisheries
The fisheries sector primarily consists of persons actually engaged
in fishing. It is difficult to count fishermen since this is an indus-
try in which proprietors do much of the work, often with unpaid family
help, because the work is seasonal in nature, and because many out-of-
state persons take part. This causes the state's employment statistics,
based on employment covered by unemployment insurance, to be misleading. -
Likewise, multiple licenses and unfished licenses make fisherman licen-
ses a misleading indicator. Area-of-catch statistics collected on fish
landed in Alaska, together with independent data on crew size, by gear
60
type, give a pretty good picture of total persons actually engaged in
fishing. For Southc:entral Alaska (hut inclucling the AlPutian c:h<=tin),
annual average employment on this basis is about two thousand persons,
while it was 4,359 statewide in 1975. In the high case, it is assumed
that in existing fisheries, expansion of fishing productivity would be
offset by limited entry and labor--saving improvements in the fleet,
leaving constant employment at existing levels. However, given very
favorable conditions, major development of the American trawl fishery
off Alaska's coast could result in 100 percent replacement of the for-
eign fishing effort inside the 200-mile limit·by the year 2000, employ-
ing about 17.5 thousand persons in fishing statewide and 8.7 thousand
(or 50 percent) in Southcentral. This was considered to be a very
speculative development; consequent~y, no bottomfishing development
was added in the low case, and existing fisheries just maintained
current employment.
Output level of existing fisheries in the high case expands consider-
ably, since the state is assumed to undertake an aggressive hatchery and
pabitat improvement program, together with the 200-mile economic zone.
The combined effect is assumed to be a quadrupling of salmon catch,
while shellfish remain at about existing levels. The expansion of the
trawl fishery was assumed to result in a Southcentral catch of 1.85 bil;...
lion pounds per year, worth $361 million ex-vessel in the high case.
In the low case, all fisheries maintain their approximate 1975 levels.
Mining, Including Oil and Gas
The mining sector is dominated by employment and output in oil and
gas, with lesser amounts in coal, sand and gravel, and a few persons
engaged in precious metal exploration and extraction. For the state
as a whole, oil and gas developments are expected to dwarf all other
considerations in this industry. Within Southcentral Alaska, an im-
portant local issue is the-development of the Beluga coal field.
0
0
0
61
The developments in mining in the high case are assumed to be as
follows: There is a small find of hyd:rocarbon~ in the Northern Gulf
of Alaska, but no important production. If the mean expected reserves
are found, peak production would be about 932 thousand barrels of oil
per day in 1985, and peak gas production of 0.5 billion cubic feet per
day in 1987. The Sadlerochit; Kuparuk River, and L~sburne,formations
at Prudhoe Bay all combine in the high .case for a 1.785 mill1on barrels/
day flow of oil in 1985. In addition, the joint state/federal lease
sale is assumed to contain oil and gas resources equivalent to total .,
reserves of 1.9 billion barrels. The Lower Cook Inlet produces substan-
tial oil and gas--about 930 thousand barrels per day of oil at peak
production. There are also two lease sales--in the Northern Gulf of
Alaska (Sale 55) and Western Gulf/Kodiak Area (Sale 46)--which result in
moderate-sized oil finds. Peak oil production .in the Northern Gulf. is
. about .550 million barrels per day in 1986, and .515 miilion barrels per
day in 1992 in the Western Gulf. Daily gas production peaks at 1.0 be£/
day in the Northern Gulf and .26 bcf/c:lay in the Western Gulf. Coal pro-
duction in the high case would begin in 1983, with full-scale mining of
730,000 tons of coal per year by 1984 to feed a mine-mouth power plant,
twice that amount by 1986 to feed a second plant, and development of
exports amounting to six million tons/year by,l990. In the high ·case,
employment peaks at slightly over nine thousand in 1984, subsequently
declining to 8·,200 in 1995, while output rises to $4~8 billion (constant
1972 dollars), tailing off to $3.9 billion.
Low case development basically consists of development at or around
Prudhoe Bay. There is exploration in all the areas noted in the previous
case, but exploration turns up far fewer prospects worth developing.
While the Kuparuk and Lisburne are developed in this case and there is
a joint offshore sale, the Beaufort sale turns up only 0.8 billion
barrels of reserves instead of 1.9 billion. The Lower Cook turns up
only a small find, while the Northern Gulf and Western Gulf are dry
62
and result in "exploration only" employment. Beluga coal is not
developed in the low case. As a result of all this, statewide peak
employment in mining rises to about seven thousand in 1984, dropping
to less than 4,800 by the end of the century.
Within the region, exploration plus development of oil and gas
employ almost 4,800 persons by 1984 in the high case, declining there-
after. Beluga coal adds about 220 workers by 1990, the first year of
coal export. In the low case, the peak employment is only 2,700 persons
i~ 1984, the peak year, and declines sharply thereafter.
Food Manufacturing
The food manufacturing industry in Alaska is dominated by seafood
processing, a s.ituation which is not expected to change in the near
future~ In the high case, the projected fourfold increase'in the out-
put of the salmon fisheries implies about a doubling in employment
required to process the salmon. SJnce it was assumed that shellfish
are at or near maximum sustained yield, the overall processing plant
employment for existing fisheries is projected to increase about
25 percent. Also in the high case, by the year 2000 the 100 percent
replacement of foreign bottomfish effort off Alaska results in a catch . ' '
of 3.7 million metric tons per year,.requiring estimated total process-
ing employment of about 12,000 full-time bottomfish and s~ort-term (five-
month) seasonal employment of 21,211--for an annual.average of 21,000 by
2000. However, we assumed that only about one-third of total catch ..
would be processed in Alaska shore-based facilities, resulting in total
Southcentral Alaska shore-based employment of 3,759 and affecting the
local economy. The remainder of the 21,000 work on processing vessels
nearshore and offshore, but their incomes probably would affect the Anchor-
age economy and the statewide economy to some degree. Output for this
industry was estimated by taking the expected ex-vessel value and using
the historic ratio of ex-vessel to wholesale value, and the ratio of
0
0
g
. :.J
63 .
value-added to wholesale value. In the high cases,_the value of catch
in existing fisheries was assumed to rise at the same rate as .totaL
catch, yielding $220 million in value added in 2000, while catch in the
emergent trawl fishery was assumed to rise to $722 million (3.7 million
metric tons), yielding about $253 million of value added in processing
(all value added in constant 1972 dollars). In the low case, a growth
rate of one percent per year was projected for total output·, yielding
$123.3 million per year value-added by 2000.
Lumper and Wood Products Manufacturing
The two critical assumptions for this industry are the annual cut
of timber in the state, determined mostly by Forest Servlce allowable
,,
cut and Japanese market conditions, and.whether any dimension sawmills
are built in Alaska. In the high case, the annual cut by the year 2000
was assumed to be 1,260 million board feet (probably partly 1from Native
lands), compared with 660 million in 1970·~ ··· In the low case, the increase
is to only 960 million. No new mills are built in either c;ase. While
! . .
pot exactly proportional, the increase in employment is s:i:milar: in the
~igh .·case, statewide employment rises to 3,834 from 2.,176. in 1975; in the
low case, the rise is from 2,176 to 3,280. The output of this industry
was estimated by calculating the 1975 rat_io ,_of output per employee.
This was assumed to escalate at its 1965-1975 rate of growth in the high
~as~ (about 1.66 per~ent), but stayed at 1975 levels in the low case.
~ai'!-ce a:J..most all the prime timber likely to be exploited by an
.. . ' .
expand:f_n~ industry is located outside the Southcentral region; we
assumed that in Other Southcentral, the employment of firms in this
sector would escalate by about 1 percent per year in the low case, by
2.3 percent per year in the high case, which is about the same or less
~han the statewide rates. Employment was assumed constant in Anchorage •
64
Pulp and Paper Manufacturing
The growth in th~s sector is determined by most of the same factors
as lumber and wood products. In neither case is there a pulp mill built
·in Southcentral Alaska, so there is no employment or output in this sec-
tor within the region. In the state, the increase in total cut results
in average employment increases of about 1.6 percent per year in the low
case, 1.8 percent per year in the high, resulting in totals of 1,777 and
1,886, respectively. In the low case, productivity per worker remains
at its 1975 value; in the high case, it increases at 2.76 percent annually,
its 1965-1975 rate, resulting in 1972-dollar value added of $133.5 million
and $141.7 million, respectively, in the year 2000.
Other Manufacturing
This sector is an odd mixture of a wide variety of cottage industries,
printing and publishing, and consumer goods manufacture, together with a
few major petrochemical plants and refineries. The major possible sources
of new employment in this sector were assumed to be the Alpetco royalty
oil refinery-petrochemical complex, Alaska Pacific LNG plant, and whatever
other LNG or gas treatment facilities might be associated with gas out-
put from Lower Cook Inlet and the Gulf of Alaska. In the high case, the
total operating employment of these facilities was about two thousand
persons (mostly working for Alpetco). In the low case, the only source
was Pacific LNG, employing about 60 persons.. Statewide output in this
sector was more of a problem since it was unclear how much the output to
be added by any of the LNG plants might be. It was decided ·to subsume
LNG value-added under mining, and in the high case, value-added in other
manufacturing was estimated as the existing level of output, plus total
revenues of Alpetco, minus cost of feedstocks, from the Alpetco pro forma
financial projections of March 10, 1978. All the growth was centered in
Other Southcentral. In the low case, the existing level of output was
used.
0
8
0
65
Construction
For modeling purposes, it was only necessary to estimate __ 't~~-~1:--_______ _
employment working on major projects exogenous to the economy, since the
rest of construction is projected with the support sector and output in
endogenous construction is determined in the models. In the high case,
the significant projects within the region were assumed to be oil treatment
and shipment facilities in the Gulf of Alaska and Kodiak Subregions and
the Kenai-Cook Inlet Census Division, small LNG facilities associated
with the Northern Gulf and Lower Cook Inlet development, a Beluga coal
transshipment facility, Pacific LNG and Alpet·co plants, and a new state
capital in Willow. .Outside the region, there is augmentation of TAPS
pipeline capacity, the Northwest Alaska gas pipeline is constructed, and
field development facilities are projected for the Beaufort Sea and the
Kuparuk and Lisburne formations. Statewide, total exogenous construction
employment peaks at a total of about 14 thousand in 1981, declining
rapidly thereafter. In the region, thepeak employment is a bit less
than seven thousand in 1981.
The level of construction employment was considerably less in the
low case, both because of fewer developments in oil and gas, and because
several projects needing state support do not occur, e.g. Alpetco and
the state capital move. In this case, the Northwest Alaska pipeline is
constructed, but the oil finds at Prudhoe Bay offshore areas are rela-
tively small, as are those in Lower Cook Inlet. The Kuparuk and Lus-.
burne formations are developed, and the Pacific LNG plant is built.
However, there is no new substantial augmentation to fish processing in
the form of new plants to process bottomfish. In the low case, state-
wide peak employment in exogenous construction is about 9,500, while in
the region it is about 1,800.
-. ~.
'~~$;~,·
66
Federal Government
Federal government employment has been growing very little over
the last ten years, with civilian increases about offset by decreases
in military employment. The rate of civilian increase has been about
0.5 percent per year, and in the low case, lacking the boost of any
massive developments requiring federal support, and lacking a new state .
capital, the likely rate of increase in.feqeral civilian employment is
assumed to remain at 0.5 percent. This means employment increases from
18 thousand to 21 thousand statewide, and from 10,900 to 12,250 in the
region by 2000. In the high case, general development results in a
doubling of the average rate of increase to about 1 percent per year in
federal government in most of the state, and 1.2 percent per year in
Southcentral to reflect the state capital move. This increases state-
wide federal civilian employment from 18,000 to 22,000, and regional
employment from 10,900 to 14,500. Federal military employment is as-
sumed to remain constant at 1975 levels in both the state and region.
State Government
State government employment assumptions went through several revi-
sions because of concern about state budgets. Historically, the rate of
growth in this sector averaged 8.5 percent per year, a rate which most
task force members believed was unlikely to continue. On the other
hand, in the.high case, bottomfish development, major oil development,
and the moving of the state capital to Willow were likely to result in
fairly substantial increases in state employment. In the high case, it
was assumed that 2,750 positions were transferred from Juneau to Willow.
Total state government employment would increase from 14,700 to about
39,000 in the year 2000, declining from around 7.6 percent of civilian
wage and salary employment to about 7.2 percent. In the region, state
employment bulks fairly large because of the state capital move, with
the total from Anchorage and Other Southcentral combined moving from
5,400 to 14,900, or from 5.2 percent to 13.1 percent of total employment.
0
67
In the low case, it was assumed that government growth is restricted
by lower development needs, by funding constraints or public ()pi-q:i,op., qn_d
by the fact that the state capital does not move. Before 1985, state
government employment growth is held to about 2 percent per year, with
zero growth thereafter. As a result, state employment goes from 14-,700
in 1975 to 19,159 in 2000, about 6.4 percent of civilian employment_in the
latter year. In the region, total state employment rises from 5,400 to
7,140 in 1985-2000, about 6.1 percent of civilian employment in 1975 and
3.1 percent in the year 2000 •
. Local Government
Local government was assumed to be influenced in the future by many
of the same factors influencing the rate of growth in state employment.
The historic rate from 1965 to 1975 was 10.5 percent (10.1 percent in
Southcentral), partly a result of development of school systems and
the transfer of state-operated rural schools in the Unorganized Borough
to local control. Due to increasing numbers of functions being performed
at the local level and rural, development in the high case, statewide
growth was expected to be faster than in Southcentral, where local gov-
ernments are already well organized. Due to the moving of the state
capital and due to local government response to fishing and oil, local
government employment was projected to sustain about a 4 percent per
year growth rate outside the region and about 3.4 percent within the
Southcentral region. This meant a statewide increase in local employ-
ment from 14,200 in 1975 to 34,900 in 2000. In the.low case, since the
state capital does not move and state-local transfers are expected to
be sharply curtailed after 1985, the assumed rates of growth are about
2 percent until 1985 and about 1 percent thereafter. Total employment
in local government goes from 14,200 in 1975 to 20,100 in 2000. Within
the region, local government in the high case grows from about 8,100 to
about 18,600. In the low case, regional local government employment
grows from 8,100 to 11,300.
68
Miscellaneous Assumptions
In t:be :mc:>c:le~l_ •. Al~skan wage _rat~s _a_re de_termined. in .. most. ind_u_s~t_r_i~s"---"-. ~~~~--
as a function of Alaskan prices and U.S. average weekly wages in the
privat~ economy, deflated by the U.S. Consumer Price Index for Urban
Clerical Workers. (Both the latter series are published by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics.) Alaskan prices are in turn determined as a func-
tion of U.S. prices and local demand conditions, reflected by changes in
employment. Finally, migration to Alaska is calculated as a function of
the change in employment opportunities and relative per capita income in
Alaska, compared to the rest of the country. In order to project a "highn
and "low" scenario, the economics task force reexamined the assumptions
usually used to run the model for impact-assessment purposes in Alaska
and concluded that "high" or "low" growth could occur because of movements
of the economy outside the state as well as inside the state. In parti-
cular, the rates of growth of U.S. disposable personal income per capita
(2.0 percent)· and wages (1.2 percent) appeared a bit optimistic for the
low case. Therefore, in the low case, "pessimistic" forecasts by Data
Resources, Inc. were used: 1.0 percent per annum average increase in
real wages and 1.77 percent average increase in real disposable personal
income per capita. These two changes had little influence on the out-
come of the projections.
Government expenditures other than wages and salaries directly in-
fluence output in the construction sector. To avoid hav~ng to mak~ a
series of complex assumptions of doubtful validity concerning government ,.
capital spending programs, the task force assumed other government
spending increased proportionately to government employment.
Finally, the task force recognized that some of the service, public
utilities, and transportation employment in the Sotithcentral area would
not be local-serving employment at all. Particularly, employment in
these sectors for Alyeska Pipeline Service Company and Beluga coal extrac-
tion would be essentially exogenous to the local economy. Consequently,
an exogenous component was added for employment in these three sectors
to adjust for the employment by Alyeska and by Beluga.
0
69
Methodology Used to Disaggregate Regional
Control Totals for the 3 Subregions
The econometric models used by the task force give projections
of employment and population at the regional level, the two "regions"
projected by the model being Anchorage and the remainder of Southcentral
Alaska. It was therefore necessary to devise a method consistent with
the known facts about the Southcentral economy which would permit dis-
aggregation of the regional results into subregional totals. The method
used was a multistep process employing a simple series 9f desk calculator
manipulations of the output data. The method required ·three types of ·
major assumptions:
1.
2.
The location of ''basic" industry activity within the
respective subregions iri. "Other" Southcentral. (Anchorage
is projected as a separate region by the model.)
The ratio of "nonbasic" to "basic" employment· in at
least two of the subregions over time (the third sub-
region could take all residual nonbasic employment).
3. The manner in which population change could be expected
to follow employment changes.
The decisions concerning the location of most basic industry employment
were relatively straightforward, since most activity was associated with
a small series of specific developments, such as the Pacific LNG plant
and support bases for Western Gulf of Alaska oil exploration, whose likely
location could be pretty well established. The exceptions were agricul-
ture, whose activity was allocated to the Matanuska-Susitna and Kenai-
Cook Inlet Census Divisions on the strength of their superior transpor-
tation links; fishing, which was allocated in accordance with historical
shares of activity; and government, where separate estimates had to be
made for each census division by the task force's government employment
expert. A separate ratio of nonbasic to basic employment was estimated
for the Gulf of Alaska and Kodiak-Shelikof subregions, with the remain-
der of nonbasic employment allocated to Other Cook Inlet (Cook Inlet
70
subregion, excluding Anchorage). This was done since it was assumed
-~-~~-~----~---mo.s,t~of~Gl1e~suppo-rct~-se&too,r~~Fow"Eh~woH1d~ae"EU-al+y~occu-r~in~ether-eook~--~~---c-
Inlet, and because the historical period showed that the expected
basic employment increases in the other two subregions was to occur
in-industries which have not typically resulted in large support sector
increases. Nevertheless, the assumptions were different in the high
and low cases, to reflect different ideas about the rate of maturation
of rapidly growing, subregional economies. Finally, population was
allocated by first projecting changes in total employment in eacg sub-
region, estimating each subregion's share of the total, and then allocat-
ing the corresponding regional change in civilian non-Native population
pot employed in exogenous construction by these shares. Exogenous
construction employment was allocated by assuming the construction
workers lived at or near the construction site; Native population was
allocated by the percentages of Natives living in villages in each of
the ·subregions within Other· Southcentral in 1974. Military population
~as allocateq using the state's estimate of military population by
.census division for 1975.
Jligh Case
Specifically, the following was done in the high case. Basic
employment (mi~ing, exogenous construction, manufacturing, government
excluding federal military, agriculture-forestry-fisheries, plus approxi-
mately 500 service; and transportation sector jobs at Valdez related to
the pipeline terminal) was allocated by giving the Other Cook Inlet all
its existing employment, plus all Beluga coal; Lower Cook Inlet oil ex.:..
.ploration and development; one-fourth of Northern Gulf of Alaska mining,
construction, and other manufacturing; Pacific LNG, new capital city
employment; about 32 percent of fishing and fish processing; and all
agriculture. Gulf of Alaska got its existing employment, plus three-
fourths of Northern Gulf of Alaska activity, all Alyeska pipeline activity
(including 500 support sector jobs allocated to basic employment), its
~xisting proportion (about 3.4 percent) of fishing and fish processing,
J 71
0
Q
C)
0
plus all Alpetco employment. Kodiak-Shelikof got all its existing ac-
tivity, all activity related to Western Gulf of Alaska oil, and abo~; ______ _
65 percent of fisheries-related activity.
Nonbasic employment was projected specifically for the Gulf of Alaska
and Kodiak-Shelikof subregions. For the Gulf, the ratios of nonbasic
employment to basic employment for Valdez-Chitian-Whittier Census Division
for 1973 and 1975 were estimated, 1973 shmo1ing pre-boom conditions and
1975 showing boom conditions. If the Alpetco petrochemical plant is
built, and fish processing expands, this area can be_expected to develop
a +arger support sector. The Kenai Peninsula, during the years 1965 to
1975, was used as a model, and the ratio of nonbasic-to-pasic employment
was assumed to approach current levels .in the Kenai-Cook.Inlet census
division. Kodiak was expected to be a somewhat more stable and growing
economy than the Gulf of Alaska area as a consequence of major fisheries
qevelopments in the high case. It was therefore assumed that the ratio .. .
pf nonbasic~to-basic employment would approach the current regional
~verage toward the end of the century. The date picked was ten years
after startup of oil production from the Western Gulf of Alaska--1996.
~ ..
The r.ernaintng nonbasic employment was al:j.ocated to Other Cook Inlet.
~ . ~ . : ~ .
Population was allocated by beginning with the state's estimate
of 1975 population by census division and then allocating the regional
. population changes as outlined above in the general descripticm of the
1llethodology; .·An exception had to be made for the Gulf of Alaska in 1980.
In the low case, about 2,124 net jobs were estimated to have been lost
from the Gulf's economy between 1975 and 1980 as a result of pipeline
completion. Total 1975-1980 growth of regional population in the low
case was 1,331 persons, who were allocated to the three subregions
according to share of employment gro:wth. This meant that since the Gulf
showed a decline amounting to -57.3 percent of total employment change,
it got -57.3 percent ot total civilian non-Native, nonexogenous construc-
tion population change. In 1990-1995, th~ winding down of Northern Gulf
72
of Alaska oil activity resulted in the net loss of about eight hundred
jobs. However, population loss was estimated at over two ~housand,
which seemed to imply too many dependents of oil workers. An adjustment
was made instead by making the 1975 Valdez population/ employment ratio
of 1.3 the population "multiplier," which was thought to produce popu-
lation losses more in keeping with the type of jobs and population in
the subregion.
Low Case.
The same basic procedure was followed in the low case as in the
high case, except that the amount of basic employment to be allocated
was less and there were different assumptions to be made concerning the
nonbasic/basic employment ratio for Gulf of Alaska and Kodiak-Shelikof.
In the low case, the nonbasic/basic ratio for Gulf of Alaska in 1975
(slightly lower than the average of 1973 and 1975 ratios for the Valdez-
Chitina-Whittier Census Division) was used throughout the forecast
period to reflect no "filling in" or maturing of the subregional economy.
In the Kodiak subregion, no impetus was expected to.come from additionpl
fisheries development. Consequently, no change in the nonbasic/basic
ratio was projected for Kodiak-Shelikof. The remainder of regional
nonbasic employment (except 500 Alyeska terminal jobs in Valdez desig-
nated "basic") was allocated to Other Cook Inlet. With respect to the
allocation of population change, the declines in employment in Gulf of
Alaska and Kodiak-Shelikof between 1985 and 1990 as a result of failed
oil exploration programs in the Gulf of Alaska were larger than the net
regional employment growth. This produced implausibly large declines
in population. Therefore, an adjustment was made that used the 1975
population/employment ratios for these two areas as "multipliers" to
estimate population decline. The Other Cook Inlet area was then ad-
justed to the control total of regional population change.
0
0
0
0
73
Assumptions Used to Estimate
Employment and Population, 2000-2025
The task force was charged with estimating total employment and
population after the year 2000, but the econometric models' results
were doubtful that far in the future. The task force instead developed
some educated guesses concerning the Alaskan economy in the post-2000
period, and these were used to extrapolate the year 2000 results to 2025.
Basically, the same methodology was used as above. The basic sector
employment was projected by individual industry, a relationship between
nonbasic and basic employment was assumed, and then a relationship be-
tween p0pulation and employment assumed and projected. This was done
regionally both for Anchorage and Other Southcentral, and the results
allocated proportionately within Other Southcentral using year 2000
proportions for employment and population. ·
Basic employment was projected as follows. Since there were no
significant additional prospects for oil development in Southcentral
Alaska after 2000, this sector was assumed to stabilize at its year 2000
level, replacing old fields with some additional development. This was
true in both cases. Exogenous construction tends to follow oil develop-
ment, so it, too, was left at its year 2000 level. Federal civilian
employment continued to grow to serve the expanding post-2000 population:
by 1.2 percent per year in ·the high case and 0.5-0.6 percent in the low
case. State and local government continued to grow at the rates pro-
jected for their respective cases from 1975 to 2000, with fairly rapid
expansion in the high case, and virtually no expansion in the low case.
Agriculture continued· to expand after 2000 in the high case, with some
significant opening up of lands other than in Other Cook Inlet. There
was no post-2000 development in the low case. Since manufacturing of
fish products, lumber, wood, and pulp was assumed to fully utilize the
available resources (as in the high~case), or its growth was restricted
74
by external institutional market factors (as in the low case), the level
.~----~-~~-~~~of_ em-g1Q..)T.I!le.n.t~in~the_s_e~i_n_d_us_tx_i_es~w.a_s~held~cons.tant.._at~the~Jtear~2noo~-~~-~-~
level. Fishing itself was assumed to replace ten percent of the foreign
bo·ttomfishing effort after 2000 by the year 2025 in the low case, but
there was assumed to be no change in the traditional fisheries beyond
their year 2000 level. In Other Manufacturing, the year 2000 employment_
level was sustained, except that nonpetrochemical "other" manufacturing
was projected to.double after the year 2000 to serve local markets in
the high case. The extrapolations were done separately for Anclwrage
and Other Southcentral, added together into basic sector employment, and
disaggregat_ed within Other Southcentral based on the year: 2000 proportions
of basic employment.
In projecting the nonbasic/basic ratio, somewhat different procedures
were used for Anchorage and the rest of the region. In Other Southcentral,
the year 2000 regional ratiC? of nonbasic-to-basic employment was multiplied
times regional basic employment each year out to 2025 and disaggregated,
using year 2000 proportions, which permitted proportional growth in the
nonbas,ic sector in each subregion after the. year 2000. In the high case,
the nonbasic/basic ratio was assumed to converge to the existing 1975
U.S. ratio by 2025, but it was found to be already there by 2000. In
Anchorage, it was recognized that much of the "support sector" employ-
ment. in fact serves statewide needs in transportation, financiai services,
etc. Therefore, an estimate was made of local-serving nonbasic employ-
ment by multiplying the statewide nonbasic/basic ratio times local basic
sector employment. The remainder was designated "statewide-serving" non-
basic employment,.which was assumed to grow at the same rate as basic
employment because Anchorage statewide services in both the basic sector
and this part of the nonbasic sector can be assumed to grow in response
to similar statewide demands for central offices and general support
services. With the Anchorage economy relatively mature by that time, it
is more difficult to argue that statewide-serving nonbasic firms would
continue to grow faster than their counterparts in the basic industries
after 2000 than before 2000.
0
Q
0
J
J
75
Finally, civilian non-Native population not emp.loyed in exogenous
construction was estimated using year 2000 population/employment ratios
at the regional iev.el and allocated to subregions using year 2000 pro-
portions. Any assumption other than proportional population growth
among subregions after 2000 was judged too difficult to defend, since
so little is known about the character of Alaska's economy at that
point. To this was added exogenous construction employment (no growth):t
Native population (2 percent growth per year), and military (no growth).
76
CHAPTER 3
PR,.OJ,:ECTION RESULTS FOR SOIJTHC.F.NTRAT. Al.ASKA, 1975-2025
Growth to 2000
The economy of Southcentral Alaska grows quite rapidly under both
the high and low sets of assumptions until the year 2000, arid somewhat
less rapidly thereafter. In the high case, gross real output of the
Southcentral economy more than quadruples before the end of the century,
and it more than doubles in the lpw case. Correspondingly, employment
:i.n the high case grows to about 3.7 times its 1975 level by the year
2000, and more than doubles in the low case. Population ~rows to almost
700 thousand people (three times the 1975 level) by the year 2000 in the
high case and to 445 thousand (or about double the 1975 level) in the low
case. The rate of growth is lower in the first twenty-five years of the
next century in these scenarios: year 2025 population, for example, is
!'only" 40 percent larger than its year 2000 level in the high case, and
17 percent higher than its year 2000 level in the low case. This chapter
presents several of the relevant measures of economic activity on a
~egional basis. to.· the year 2000; it also includes detailed estimates of
employment and.population, disaggregated to the subregional level and
projected to the year 2025.
The first section of this chapter discusses the Southcentral Alaska
~conomy as asingle unit to the year 2000. The second section discusses
~rowth in the individual sectors, focusing on employment; and the third
~ection compares and contrasts economic and population growth in each of
rhe three subregions identified in the first chapter: Cook Inlet, Gulf
of Alaska, and Kodiak-Shelikof. Because Anchorage is atypical and so
important to both the regional economy anq the Cook Inlet subregion,
Anchorage results are reported separately. The final·section discusses
the projection results for the period 2000 to 2025.
Q
77
Output
Table 16 reports total output in 1972 dollars for the high and low
cases for Anchorage, Other Southcentral, andthe region. The pattern
of industrial output in the region is strongly influenced by construc-
tion and oil production projects in the 1980s in both cases. Real out-
put shows a huge bulge in the Other Southcentral subregion related to
building of the Pacific LNG plant and oil.exploration in both cases, the
additional impact of state capital construction, Alpetco construction,
and the beginnings of oil production in Lower Cook ·Inlet and fisheries
development between 1980 and 1985~ That this boom is primarily oil and
exploration-related is shown by the rather sharp tailing off of output
after 1985 (and particularly after 1990) in both cases. Fisheries
development, government growth, and ongoing oil production keep output
in the high case at relatively high levels in the 1990s, but. they cannot
match the exploration and development impact of the oil ind~stry. For
example, the nonoil and construction output of the Other Southcentral
economy actually increases rela-tively little between 1975 and 1980 (from
$230.7 million to $349.4 million in 1972 dollars). In contrast, the
output of Anchorage's economy grows fairly vigorously in both cases,
with the higher level in the later years of the century beit!g su~tained·
by overall state growth. Anchorage output is· apparently below thp.t of
Other Southcentral in the years up through 1985 in the low case and 1990
in the high case. In terms of economic activity, this is misleading,
i however, since oil industry output.acc~unts for well over 75: percent of
the Other Southcentral total during the period. By 2000 in the high
case, the Anchorage economy dominates the region with 65 percent of out-
put, ev~n when th~ oil industry is counted. When the oil industry is
subtracted, then Anchorage accounts for 74 percent of the total. In the
low case, the correspo~ding figures. are 69 percent and 88 percent, show-:
ing that the Anchorage economy is relatively less dependent on development
within the region.
Table 16
Growth of Constant Dollar (Real) Output:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(Millions of 1972 Dollars)
High Development: Low Development:.
Other .. Other
Year Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral
1975 . ·$1,281.6 $556.7 $1,838.3 $1,281.6 . $556.7 $1,838.3
80 1,743.7 2,953.8 4,697.5 1,722.4 2,664.8 4,387.2
-..!
00
85 2,261.6 6,444.7· 8,706.3 1,892.4 2, 711.2 4,603.6
90 3,017.9 5,179.8 8,197.7 2,173.3 1,416.7 3,590.0
95 3,907.2 2,567.7 6,474.9 2,674.2 1,456.7 4~130.9
2000 5,455.4 2,894.0 8,349.4 3,341.5 1,504.0 4,845.5
,.~ .. ~-{~~: f.iq~,'
0
0
0
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Q
79
Employment
Next, consider the employment opportunities offered by the devel-
opments projected in the two cases. These are shown in Table 17.
Southcentral civilian employment is projected to rise substantially in
both cases, relative to its 1975 level. The oil industry is a high-
output, low-employment industry, which is revealed by the fact that the
total output bulge created by oil development is much larger in·per-
centage terms than that in employment associated with exploration and .
development of Southcentral oil fields in both cases.between 1980 and
1990. Of more importance to the emp~oyment totals in Other Southcentral
is the construction of several large projects in the 1980s (compare the
jump :tn employment between 1980 and 1985 in Other Southcentral in the
high case with the almost flat employment pattern in the low case), and
government growth and fisheries development which occur between 1985 and
2000 in the high case, but not in the low case. Anchorage again shows
quite steady and sustained growth in both cases but much greater employ-
~ent in the higp case because of overall state growth, growth in govern-
¢~nt: employment in Anchorage, and continued construction andexpansion
of the support sector.
lncome
In addition to the employment impacts, an important impact on indi-. . . .
·. :-,
· viduals is the. effect of growth on inc~me.' Table 18, shows rea.l per capita
income gains averaging Cl.bout 1.1 perce;nt. per year in the high case, and ' ' . . . . . .
0.8 percent in the low case. In the high case,, this is a rate of increase
about like that: in the United States in the last ten years; in the low
case, it is more like the rate of increase during a recession. While
tpe model projection is silent on the question of distribution of income,
Table 18 dljlta do give some idea of the aggregate prosperity of the resi-
. '
pents of Southcentral Alaska. One thing to consider while examining
fhese figures is that they are not residence-adjusted income figures;
fherefore, they may be too high in Other Southcentral, for example, if
people live in Anchorage or out-of-state and commut.e to jobs in the
Table 17
Civilian Employment in Anchorage,
Other Southcentral, and Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000 .
(Number of Persons)
High Development: Low Development:
Other Other
SoubhcentraL Year Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral Anchorage Southcentral
1975 1 69,645 19,753 89,398 69,645 19,753 89,398
I
80 84,600 28,569 113,169 84,486 23,459 107 945 !' , (X)
0
85 109,494 47,668 157,132 93,689 24,346 1~8,035
i
I 90 143,659 59,036 202,695 109,014 24,558 1:33,572
I•
I•
95 176,946. 71,097 248,043 133,702 26,875 160,577
I' ,,
2000 232,846 98,682 3.31,528 168,493 29,731 198 224
II '
1corresponding nonagricultural wage and salary employment for 1975 appears in Table A.2.
G
Year
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
Year
1975
80
85
90
95
2000 -.
u 0 0 0 0
Table 18
Real Wage and Salary and Proprietor Income Earned
Plus Transfers, and Per Capita Income:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(1967 Dollars)
HIGH CASE:
Total Income (10 6 $):
Other
Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral
$ 962.4 $ 299.3 $1~261.7
1,095.3 391.1 1,486.4
1,453.4 704.4 2,157.8
1,957.2 871.5 2,828.7
2,517.6 1,061.5 3,579.1
3,458.1 -1,563.2 5 ,021. 3
LOW CASE:
Total Income (10 6 $):
Other
Anchorage Southcentra1 Southcentra1
$ 962.4 $ 299.3 $1,261.7
1,112.5 315.3 1,427.4
1,265.0 334.7 1,599.7
1,473.6 349.5 1,823.1
1,923.2 410.0 2,333.2
2,481.6 482.7 2,964.3
Anchorage
$5,413
5,317
5,695
6,039
6,424
6,908
Anchorage
$5,413
5,427
5,580
5,644
6,210
6., 614 ....
Per Capita Income:
Per
Other
Southcentral
$5,789
6,566
7,450
7,303
7,297
7,847
Capita Income:
Other
Southcentra1
$5,789
6,112
6,077
6,064
6,467
6,908
0
Southcentra1
$5,498
5,598
6,169
6,380
6,660
7,175
Southcentral
$5,498
5,563
5,679
5,720
6,254
6,660
( .. u
82
Other Southcentral census divisions. The table indicates in general
that real per capita income grows throughout t·he p,eriod, except for' a
small drop in Anchorage between 1975 and 1980 caused by faster price
inflation and faster initial population growth in the high case, and
reductions in Other Southcentral in the 1980s caused by the winding down
of development related to the oil industry.
Population
Population growth is one important response to the growth of the
Southcentral economy in both the high and low cases. The amount and
rate of population growth. in Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral is
shown in Table 19. The most obvious general observation one can make
about population growth in the two cases is that the causes of growth in
Anchorage and Other Southcentral differ. Other Southcentral is expected
to be influenced strongly by local development; while Anchorage, which
depends on statewide growth, is affected less by the choice of scenario.
The spread between the cases is also large, ranging from 94 percent
growth in the low case over the next 25 years, which is 2.7 percent per
year or about 48 percent of the 1965 to 1975 rate, to 205 percent growth
in the high case over 25 years, which is 4.6 percent per year or 82 per-
cent of the 1965 to 1975 rate. In neither case is Southcentral Alaska
projected to grow as fast as in the ten years preceding the forecast
period. The high growth case is roughly equivalent to the rate of
growth experienced between 1965 and 1973, prior to the pipeline boom,
while the low growth case is less than the rate of growth during the
years between the earthquake and the North Slope' lease sale.
Distribution of Growth Among Ind~stries
Table 20 shows the projected growth of the Southcentral economy
in the high and low cases, divided into four groups of industries:
"nonrenewable resource" basic industries (defined here as mining, ex-
ogenous construction, exogenous transport, public utilities, services,
u u v
/
Table 19
Population Growth: Southcentral Region, 1975-2000
(Thousands of Persons)
High Development: Low Development:
· Other Other
Year Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral
1975 177.8 51.7 229.5 177.8 51.7 229.5
80 206.0 59.5 265.5 205.0 51.6 256.6
85 255.2 94.6 349.8 226.7 55.0 281.7
90 324.1 119.3 443.4 261.1 57.6 318.7 : CX>
IW
!
95 391.9 145.5 537.4 3p9.7 63.4 373.1
2000 500.6 199.2 699.8 375.2 69.9 445.1
Average
Annual Rate
of Growth
1975-2000 4.2% 5.5% 4.6% 3.0% 1.2% 2.7%
Year
1975
80
85
90
95.
2000
Year
1975
80
85
90
95
·2000
84
Table 20
Projected Civilian Employment Growth by Industry Group,
Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(Thousands of Persons)
HIGH CASE:
Nonrenewable Renewable Support
Resources Resources Government Sector
6.117 4.997 24.348 53.936
8.297 5.699 26.955 72.218
12.188 7.324 31.830 105.790
9.648 10.635 37.220 14~.192
6.260 13.565 42.420 185.798
6.260 17.763 48.070 259.435
LOW CASE:
Nonrenewable Renewable Support
Resources Resources Government Sector
6.117 4.997 24.348 53.936
6.473 4.889 26.615 69~968
4.305 4.868 28.075 80.787
4.246 4.836 28.921 95.569
4.246 4.852 29.794 121.685
4.246 4.852 30.692 158.434
Total
89.398
113.169
157.132
202.695
248.043
331.528
Total
89.398
107.945
118.035
133.572
160.577
198.224
J
85
,. -~~~;t~ ."\·
and "other" manufacturing), "renewable resource" basic industries
(agriculture-forestry-fisheries, food manufacturing, lumber and wo·od
products, and pulp and. paper), government, and the support sector.
.. ~-~··*~· ~··
The table demonstrates that most of the growth in the high case occurs
in the support.sector, the largest of the four groups. Government
grows steadily throughout the period, just about doubling during the
25 years. Nonrenewable resources enjoys a boom which peaks in the
middle 1980s, then tails off until the end of the period when it is
abouJ: its 19?5 level. Renewable resources (especially fishing) take
' over in the midqle and late 1980s and sustain the growth in the export-
base ~ndustries (nonrenewable and renewable combined), which in turn
impacts the support sector.
While the support sector still accounts for the bulk of the growth
:j..n the low case, this case shows a much smaller· long-te~m expansion of
nonrenewable resource industries and a decline relative to 1975 by the
end of the period. Renewable resource industries decline slightly due
to.the disappearance of commercial agriculture in this case, and while
~":~ . .
~overnmeht.expands by. about 15 per~ent in the first 10 years, little
further expansion,takes place. The support sector expansion is prob-
1 _-;-,·:-•
. ably due to sev~ra:t causes, iri~lud:i,.ng: :the,: short-:-term expansion of the
-;<
economy betwe~:n 1980 and i985 and the twenty-plus percent rise in real
per capif:a in~omes; maturing of th~AJ,.ask~n economy; anq economic expan-
sion elsewhere' in Alaska. The difference-in support sector employment.
=!-n Anchorage by the year 2000 is 41 percent between the two cases; it is
247 percent in the rest of the region, because there is relatively little
support sector gevelopment in the low case (9,700 new jobs), while sup-
port sector development in the higp case is spectacular (52,400 new
job13).
86
Subregional Economic and Population
Growth, 1975 to 2000
The 1975 to 2000 distribution of employment and population growth
in the Southcentral Alaska's subregions can be summarized as follows:
In the high case, the fastest growing subregion is Other Cook Inlet
followed by Kodiak-Shelikof, Anchorage, and Gulf of Alaska, in that
order. Although there is considerable year-to-year variation in the
rate of growth, only the Gulf of Alaska shows a negative growth rate
or even one which could be described as slow during any decade before
the end of the century. This is largely because several important
development projects are projected for the region in the high case. In
the low case, the comparative lack of major developments means thal uuly
Anchorage, which depends upon developments outside the region as well as
inside it, can post substantial and consistent rates of gain.in employ-
ment and population. It is trailed by Other Cook Inlet, Kodiak-Shelikof,
and Gulf of Alaska, which in the low case actually records a loss in
population relative to the boom year 1975. Table 21 summarizes growth
rates in population and civilian employment at the subregional level
between.1975 and 2000 in the high and low cases, respectively. The
results for the years 2000 to 2025 are discussed in the next section,
where the projected totals are presented.
High Case
As can be seen in Table 21, high case population growth rates are
quite variableover time, depending upon what specific deve:I,opments are
occurring. Other Cook Inlet shows the fastest overall growth rate,
largely as a result of the assumption that support sector employment
would be relatively slowly developed in Gulf of Alaska and Kodiak, com-
bined with the fact that rising incomes and basic sector employment in
the region outside of Anchorage were projected to generate some 50 thou-
sand support sector jobs over the 25-year period. Given the assumed
-location of much of the basic sector development, the task force analysis
concluded that most of the support sector development would probably occur
:)
)
J
:)
)
J
:J
87
Table 21
Average Annual Growth in Population
and Civilian Employment,
by Subregion, 1975-2000
HIGH DEVELOPMENT:
Other
Anchorage Cook Inlet Gulf of Alaska
Population:
1975-80 3.0% 4.7% -l.p%
1980-90 4.6% 7.3% 4.9%
1990-2000 4.4% 6.3% 1.2%
1975-2000 4.2% 6.4% 2.1%
Civilian Employment:
1975-80 4.0% 12.8% 0.6%
1980-90 5.4% 8.2% 5.2%
1990-2000 5.0% 6.7% 0.7%
1975-2000 5.0% 8.5% 2.5%
LOW DEVELOPMENT:
Population:
1975-80 2.9% 1.8% -6.0%
1980-90 2.4% 1.1% -0.2%
"1990-2000 . 3. 7% 2.6% 0.6%·
1975-2000 3.0% 1.8% -1.1%
Civilian Employment:
1975-80 3.9% 10.2% -8.4%
1980-90 2.6% 0.9% -1.2%
1990-2000 4.4% 2.7% 0.1%
1975-2000 3.6% 3.4% -2.2%
~ ' \
Kodiak-
Shelikof Total
2.0% 3.0%
8.9% 5.3%
4.1% 4.7%
5.6%" 4.6%
4.0% 4.8%
7.9% 6.0%
3.8% 5.0%
5.5% 5.4%
0.0% 2.3%
2.4% 2.2%
0.6% 3.4%
1.2% 2.7%
0.2% 3.8%
0.2% 2.2%
0.2% 4.0%
0.2% 3.2%
88
on the Kenai Peninsula and in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. The Gulf
of Alaska figures represent a sharp decline and recovery of the sub-
regional economy from Northern Gulf development between 1975 and 1980--
a recovery which shows up more strongly ~n the 1980 to 1990 figures.
Since there is little additional post~l990 basic sector a~Llvlty in this
region, relatively little additional population growth is expected during
the nineties, most of it a result of support sector growth. Kodiak...;.
Shelikof figures in the high case show expansion related '-to fisheries
which is strong after 1980, and which coincides with Western Gulf of
Alaska development. The expansion is more concentrated in fisheries in
the 1990s, with lower probable per capita income gains. This will tend
to reduce the rate of migration somewhat during the late 1990s, reducing
the overall growth rate below that in the 1980s.
Low Case
In the low case, all areas show considerably lower population growth
during most of the 'subperiods. Anchorage is the least affected by assump-
tions concerning Southcentral regional development, but even in Anchorage,
low case population and employment growth rates b~fore 1990 are consider-
ably less than those in the high case. Other Cook Inlet is the most
profoundly affected subregion. ~ecause much of the basic employment
growth due to development is assumed to occur in this subregion, the
failure of development to take .place in the low case reduces the average
rate of population growth from a rapid 6.4 percent to a relatively modest
1.8 percent over the period. The figures for the Gulf of Alaska are a
bit misleading, since the Gulf enjoys some construction boom periods
between the years used here as signposts; however, the ov·erall long-term
employment picture under the assumptions of the low case is one of lower
long-term employment than the 1975 boom year, with approximately steady
population between 1980 and 2000. (The percentage changes represent
small changes of 200 to 300 people.) Kodiak-Shelikof enjoys much slower
growth in the low case than in the high. The principal causal factors
of the difference are the lack of bottomfish development in the low case
J
)
89
(reflected as little employment growth in the 1980s) and the failure of
Western Gulf of Alaska oil exploration, which eliminates oil development
(indicated by the flat 1980 to 1990 employment growth). Finally, all
areas are impacted by the slower growth of government in the low case.
Post-2000 Results
As outlined irt the previous chapter, the economics task force departed
from formal modeling methodology for the period 2000 to 2025. The reasons
for this were many, but the principal one is that the structure of the
post-2000 economy is likely to be different from today's in ways that
could not be estimated well enough to justify a formal modeling method-
ology with its inherent difficulty and expense. Therefore, the task
force decided to make some relatively cruder forecasts concerning the
path of development of the basic sector after 2000. The main features
of the method used were the simplest possible link betwee-q basic employ-
ment and nonbasic employment, and estimates of population using simple
population-to-employment ratios likely to be characteristic of the latter .
part of this century. It was hoped that the resultant projections would
be robust enough to withstand a wide margin of error in assumptions con-
cerning individual sectors. The results are shown in Tables 22 and 23~ .
along with those for the pre-2000 period.
Post-2000 development is distributed proportionately across the non-
Anchorage subregions by assumption, because the post-2000 results for these
specific areas are not a result of analysis of the individual economies
as are the pre..:2000 results. Consequently, all three non-Anchorageareas
show the same rate of population growth, about 1.9-2.0 percent, in the
high case; while Anchorage, clearly the most mature economy, shows about
1.1-1.2 percent. Timing of development is obviously import~nt. If the
schedules for development in the high case were stretched out, the total
population of each area might well be lower by 2025, but the rate of
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
05
10
15
20
2025
90
Table 22 .
Southcentral Water Study
High Case Projections (HIGHSC3)
(Thousands)
Anchorage
Resident Population:
177.8
206.0
255.2
324.1
391.9
500.6
525.5
557.5
589 • .3
625.1
659.5
Other-
Cook Inlet
31.2
39.0
61.1
79.2
103.1
145.6
162.1
179.6
199.5
218.2
236.1
Basic Sector Civilian Employment
Employment in Parentheses):
Gulf of
Alaska
11.7
10.8
15.8
17.4
16.5
19.7
21.9
24.2
26.9
29.4
31.9
(1975 1\Tage and
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary
1975 (23. 239) (4.460) (3.779)
Civilian
1975 23.239 .4. 901 4.134
80 25.179 7.875 4.097
85 26.569 12.781 5.732
90 28.834 14.917 5.991
95 30.999 17.491 5.381
2000 33.364 21.987 6.084
05 35.577 24.502 6.780
10 38.862 27.171 7.518
15 41.928 30.199 8.356
20 45.482 33.022 9.137
2025 48.581 35.706 9.880
Kodiak-
Shelikof
8.8
9.7
17.6
22.7
25.8
34.0
37.9
41.9
46.6
51.0
55.1
Salary
(2.376)
3.188
3.800
6.261
7.761
8.373
10.659
11.878
13.172
14.640
16.009
17.310
Total
229.5
265.5
349.8
443.4
537.4
699.8
747.3
803.2
. 862.3
923.7
982.6
(33.854)
35.462
40.951
51.343
57.503
62.244
72.094
78.737
86.723
95.124
103.650
111.477
) 91
)
High Case Projections (continued)
) Other Gulf of Kodiak-
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof Total
Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employment:
' 1975 46.406 4.28S 1.819 1.426 53.936
80 59.421 8.920 2.048 1.828 72.218
8S 82.925 iS.901 3. 726 . 3.237 lOS. 789-
90 114.826 21.858 4.194 4.31S 14S.l93
9S 14S.947 30.809 4.036 5.007 18S.799
)
2000 199.482 48.221 4.867 6.864 259.434
OS 209·.356 ,53.739 5~424 7.649 276.168
10 221.726 59.S92 6.01S 8.483 295.816
15 234.1SS 66.234 6.68S 9.428 316.502
20 248.049 72.42S 7.310 10.309 338.'093
) 2025 261.648 78.310 7.904 11.147 359.008
Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed~ except .
Fishing and Agriculture, and Military):
)
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary Employment:
197S (69.64S) (8.745) (5. S98) (3.802) (87.790)
Total Civilian Employment:
1975 69.64S 9.186 S.9S3 4.614 89.398
~ _) 80 84.600 16.795 6.146 S.628 113.169
85 109.494 28.682 9.458 9.498 157.132
90 143.6S9 36. 77S 10.18S 12.076 202.695
9S 176.946 48.300 9.417 13.'380 248.043
2000 232.846 70.208 10.9S1 17.S23 331.528
.) OS 244.933 78.241 12.204 19.528 3S4.905
10 260.588 86.763 13.533 21.6S5 382.538
15 276.083 96.433 15.041 24.068 411.626
20 293.531 105.447 16.447 26.318 441.743
202S 310.229 114.016 17.784 28.457 470.485
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
05
10
15
20
2025
Anchorage
92
Table 23
Southcentral Water Study
Low Case Projections (LOWSC6)
(Thousands)
Other
Cook Inlet
Gulf of
Alaska·
Resident Population:
177.8 31.2 11.7
205.0 34.2 8.6
226.7 34.2 8.8
261.1 38.1 8.4
309.7 '•3. 3 8.6
375.2 49.2 8.9
383.7 53.1 9.6
392.4 57.3 10.4
401.3 61.5. 11.1
. 410.5 65.9 11.9
420.7 70.4 12.7
Kodiak-
Shelikof
8.8
8.8
12.0
11.1
11.5
11.8
12.7
13.8
14.8
15.8
16.9
Basic Sector Civilian Employment (1975 Wage and Salary
Employment in Parentheses):
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary
1975 (23.239) (4.460) (3. 779) (2.376)
Civilian
1975 23.239 4.901 4.134 ·3.188
80 24.964 7.133 2.659 3.221
85 25.238 6.640 2.679 3.791
90 25.900 6.456 2.361 3.286
95 26.631 6.573 2.377 3.-310
2000 27.331 6.747 2.393 3.337
05 28.101 7.256 2.573 3.589
10 28.893 7.812 2. 771 3.864
15 29.708 8.345 2.960 4.127
20 30.546 8.884 3.151 4 .• 394
2025 31.459 9.426 3.343 4.662
..
Total
229.5
256.6
281.7
318.7
373.1
445.1
459.1
473.9
488.7
504.1
520.7
(33.854)
35.462
37.977
38.348
38.003
38.891
39.808
41.519
43.340
45.140
46.975
48.890
93
Low Case Projections (continued)
Other Gulf of Kodiak-
.') Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof Total
Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employment:
1975 46.406 4.285 1.819 1.426 53.936
J 80 59.522 7.836 1.170 1.440 69.968
85 68.451 8.362 1.179 1. 695 79.687
90 83.114 9.947 . 1. 039 1.469 95.569
95 . 107.071 12.089 1.046 1.480 121.686
2000 141.162 14.709 1. 053 1.492 158.416
0 OS 144.131 15.820 1.133 1.605 . 162.689
10 147.131 17.033 1.219 1.728 167.111
15 150.164 18.194 1.302 1.846 171.506
20 153.229 19.369 1.387 1.965 115.950
2025 156.669 20.551 1.471 2.085 180.776
C)
Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed, except
Fishing and Agriculture, and Military):
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary Employment:
<) 1975 (69.645) (8.745) (5.598) (3 .802) (87. 790)
Total Civilian Employment:
1975 69.645 9.186 5.953 4.614 89.398
80 84.486 14.969 3.829 4.661 107.945
85 93.689 15.002. 3.858 5.486 118.035
~) 90 109.014 16.403 3.400 4.755 133.572
95 133.702 18.662 3.423 4.790 160.·577
2000 168.493 21.456 3.446 4.829 198'. 224
OS 172.232 23.076 3.706 5.194 204.208
10 176.024 24.845 3.990 5.592 210.451
:_J 15 179.872 26.539 4.262 5.913 216.646
20 183.775 28.253 4.538 6.359 .222. 925
2025 188.128 29. 977 4.814 6.747 229.666
94
growth between 2000 and 2025 would be somewhat greater. Likewise, there
is no guarantee that growth would necessarily be proportional among sub-
regions after 2000, but one could argue that general regional growth may
reduce the transportation and market size barriers which currently inhibit
development in the Gulf and Kodiak areas. The regional post-2000 rate
of growth is projected at about one-thi~d of the pre-2000 rate.
In the low case, the three non-Anchorage populations grow at 1.4 per-
cent in the post-2000 period, while Anchorage grows at about 0.5 percent.
The chief causes of growth in this case are limited bottomfish development
(which takes place much earlier in the high case) and government (espe-
cially local). Very little development was forecast for this case, so
it is conceivable that additional development in forestry, loc.al-~t!.lvlug
manufacturing, fishing, or development of oil fields not currently pro-
jected for lease sal~s could significantly change the results of the low
case by 2025. the rate of growth for the whole region after 2000 is
forecast to be about 0.6 percent, about 20-25 percent of the pre-2000
rate.
.··:'
Summary
The Southc~ntral economy and popu1atioll,. ~how s?bstantial future
gro#th regardless of whether high p_r low development ass-tuhptions are
used. H.owever, the difference between the high and low cases is sub-
stantial, and growth might well have very different impacts on South-
c.~ntral water resources in the two cases·.
The high c~se represents about the highest economic and population
growth that couf-d reasonably be expected to occur in Southcentral Alaska
pefore the year 2025, given what is currently known about the prospects
fOr the development of the region's resource base. In this case, the real
output of the economy grows to 4.6 times its 1975 boom-year level by the
)
)
)
)
J
)
)
)
95
end of the century, accompanied by a 270 p~rcent increase in employment,
and a_tripling of population. The fastest growth takes place in the
Cook Inlet subregion on the strength of several major projects in oil
and gas, fisheries development, movement of the state capital, and
broadening of the support se'ctor. Because fishin~ grows so m11r.h in
this case and because of its initial small size, Kodiak follows in per-·
centage employment and population ~ains, followed by Anchorage, largely
influenced by statewide growth, and finally by the Gulf of Alaska, with
the Alpetco project its main source of growth. After the turn of the
cen~ury, the rate of growth falls to about one-third its 1975 to 2000
rate, largely because the economy is maturing and because no major
projects are forecast for after the year 2000.
The low case represents about the lowest plausible growth rate for
Southcentral Alaska, although some major projects included in this case
such as the Northwest-Alaska gas pipeline may not in-fact be built.
Nevertheless, the task force felt that even if some of the developments
identifieq explicitly in the assumptions did not occur, the assumptions
were inimical enough to development that some other unforeseen project
was reasonably likely to take its place. In this case, the real output
of the Southcentral economy increases to about 2.6 times its 1975 level
by the end of the century, while civilian employment more than doubles,
and population nearly doubles. In, the low case, the major center of
growth is Anchorage, which grows larg~ly because of statewide develop-
ments in oil and gas, not because of regional development (which is
111inimal). After the turn of the century, the growth rate falls in this
case to about one-fourth its pre-2006 rate, again largely because no
major·development projects can be currently foreseen for the early
twenty-first century.
There is obviously plenty of room to pick between these two alter-
natives. Consequently, a third intermediate scenario was constructed
and evaluated to give water resources planners a better idea of the
"
96
sensitivity of the population and employment estimates produced in the
main report. This does not mean that planners should automatically
take ·the middle case as the "most likely" and plan only for that case
while ignoring the range of possible outcomes presented in this report.
On the contrary, successful water resource plannine for Southcentral
Alaska will have to be a dynamic process, incorporating not only contin-
gency plans or planning processes for the entire range of possibilities
presented here, but also being updated periodically as better information
becomes available.
ADDENDUM:
INTERMEDIATE CASE PROJECTIONS
_)
)
)
. )
.)
AD-1
METHODOLOGY AND DATA USED IN INTERMEDIATE CASE
Intermediate Case Assumptions Used to Produce
Economic and.Population Projections, 1975-2000
The intermediate case scenario used in this study was constructed
in a manner similar to the high and low scenarios. That is, the economic
task force took into account certain of the critical factors likely to
cause differing rates of economic growth in Southcentral Alaska and made
assumptions concerning these factors for the time period 1975 to 2000.
For the most part, the assumptions fell between the high·and low cases,
and closer to those in the low case. The assumptions in the intermediate
case produced estimates nearer the low case than the high; thus, this
third case is not in any sense simply an "average" of the high.and low.
However, since the task force also did not have a firm idea of the
relative likel~hood of the three cases, it is somewhat misleading to
call the intermediate. case assumptions "best guess" or "most likely."
Quite frequently, the assumptions represented compromises of mutually
exclusive and firmly held positions of different members of the task
force. It is only in the sense of consensus, compromise, or collective
ignorance that the intermediate case is "most likely."
The inter~ediate case does not constitute a prediction of the future
path of the Southcentral economy any more than the high and low cases do •
The intermediate case is a contingent projection, based upon· the assump-
tions which follow. The assumptions are organized by industry and are
discussed in the text. The actual numbers appear in. an appendix to the
report.
Agriculture
The growth of agriculture in the intermediate case is predicated
upon a fairly pessimistic evaluation of the chances for a combination of
favorable public policy decisions.and favorable markets. It is assumed
AD-2
that relatively low prioritywill be given to agricultural development
relative to aesthetic, recreational, subsistence, and wilderness uses of
Alaska's lands, or that market opportunities for Alaska's agricultural
products will remain minimal due to such. factors as strong competition
from imported foodstuffs and high operating costs.· In the intermediate
case, Southcentral employment in commercial agriculture rises from its
current level of about 115 man-years to about 200 man-years in the year
2000. Dollar value of agricultural-sales· in con9tant 1975 dollars ·rises
to $16.5 million, for an addition to gross state product of $3.2 million
in 1972 dollars. Statewide,_ the level of employment rises to 1,150 from
its current level of about 750 by the year 2000, and the 1975 constant
dollar agricultural sales rise to $100 million. Agriculture's total
contribution to gross state product in theyear 2000 is estimated at
19.3 million constant 1972 dollars, about one-fourth the level in the
high case. In the intermediate case, year 2000 agricultural sales rise
to about three times their 1975 level.
Forestry
Employment and output of this small component of the forest products
industry is assumed to grow at the same rate as lumber and wood products,
which constitutes the bulk of the forest products industry. This growth
is described below.
Fisheries
The high case scenario for this industry assumed a very ambitious
fisheries development program to replenish salmon·stocks and replace for-
eign bottomfish harvesting efforts with U .• S. domestic fishermen. The low
case assumed no change from current levels. The intermediate case takes
a moderate position halfway between these two extremes. That is, while
limited entry in salmon fishing and possibly shellfish limit employment
growth in existing fisheries, there is assumed to be a 50 percent replace-
ment of the foreign bottomfish effort off Alaska by the year 2000, re-.
quiring about 8,750 additional persons in fishing. While employment in
salmon fishing is.assumed to be constant, the real value of output from
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existing fisheries doubles by the year 2'000 as .. salmon run. enhan'cement
projects begin to have large impacts. Bottomfish output is estimated at·
$316 million statewide, $158 million in Southcentral.
Mining, Including Oil and Gas
The mining sector intermediate case incorporates assumptions which
are ~loser to the low case than to the high case. In the intermediate
case, the Kaparuk River. Sands formation at Prudhoe ~ay are developed, as
well as 0.8 billion barrels of new petroleum finds offshore of Prudhoe
Bay. The max:Lmum rate of t;hrougl1put of the TAPS oil pipeline is increased
to 1.6 million barrels per day. While exploration .takes place in both
the Northern Gulf of Alaska and the Western Gulf/Kodiak area as a result
of federal lease sales, there is no oil found~ and· exploration activity
soon ceases. In contrast, there is a significant find·in Lower Cook
Inlet amounting to about 2.6 billion barrels, which results in output of
about 930 thousand barrels per day atpeak pr6duction, same as the high
case. The Beluga coal fields are developed in the intermediate case; how-_
ever, in contrast to the high case, there is no export of coal. ·Instead,
a single mine-mouth electrical generating plant utilizing 730,000-tons.
of coal per year is built and operated. In the intermediate case, state-
wide employment in mining rises to a peak of about 7,100 persons in 1984,
dropping to 5,200 by 2000. Statewide value added .in mining rises·to
almost $3.0 billion 1972 constant dollars in 1984, trailing off to
$1.7 billion by the year 2000.
Within the region, mining exploration and development employ about
~,800 persons in 1984,.declining thereafter to about 1,35q in the year
2000. This· includes about ,60 miners at Beluga, with roost of the rest
:f_n oil and gas.
food Manufacturing
As in the high and low case, foo~ manufacturing is dominated by sea-
food processing, whose growth is mainly determined by,the level of output
+n fishing,' As the industry grows, however, there are opportunities for
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labor-saving innovations which keep the rate of growth in employment less
than the rate of growth in output. For instance, in order to handle the
projected doubling of the output of the salmon fleet, it is expected that
only a 50 percent increase in fish processing employment would be required.
Overall, existing fisheries are projected to require a 15 percent in-
crease in processing employment, while the 50 percent replacement of
foreign bottomfish catching effort would require about 10 thousand
persons statewide (on-and offshore) by the year 2000, about one-third
of these onshore, and about one-half of the onshore processing employ-:-
ment in the region. The total value added by food manufacturing rises
to $268 million.(l972 dollars) by the year 2000, about $124 million of
that in the region.
Lumber and Wood Products Manufacturing
· Since lumber and wood products contain most of what is thought of
as the "forestry industry," an increase in logg~ng activity would result
in growth of this sector. In the intermediate case, statewide lumber
and wood products growth is the same as in the low case; however, addi-
tional information has become available in the last six months on federal
withdrawals of timber land in the southeast part of Alaska, which indicates
that a larger part of the timber harvesting effort in the state may take.
place in the Southcentral region in the future. Employment in the Other
Southcentral lumber and wood products industry increases from the 1975
level of 278 t.o 925 by the year 2000, Employment in Anchorage holds
constant.
Pulp and Paper Manufacturing
The growth of this sector is determined by the same factors as
lumber and wood products, with the exception that all logging activity
in Southcentral is assumed to be carried out by firms engaged in manu-
facture of lumber and wood products rather than pulp and paper. Total
manufacture of statewide employment increases to 1,777 persons in the
year 2000 (none in Southcentral), same as the low case. Value added is
the same as in the low case statewide; it is zero in Southcerttral.
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Other Manufacturing
Growth of the miscellaneous manufacturing sector is directly depen-
dent upon a series of large-scale petrochemical projects whose future can
only be guessed at this time. In the intermediate case, the projects
which are included are a large fuels refinery utilizing state royalty
oil from the Alaska North Slope, an LNG facility of the type proposed
in the Pacific LNG Alaska-California project, and a smaller L~G facility
to utilize Lower Cook Inlet gas. The fue],.s refinery is substituted for
the proposed Alpetco facility shown in the high case because of per-
sistent doubt concerning the economic viability of a grass-roots petro-
chemical plant, combined with ongoing state preferences for in-state
processing of royalty oil. The fuels refinery is more likely to be
viable, requires fewer construction personnel, and employs about 400
persons during its operations phase (in contrast to over 1,800 required
in the Alpetco basic proposal). Both the Pacific LNG and the other LNG
plant employ about 60 people during operations. Statewide employment in
Other Manufacturing rises from 1,941 in 1975 to 2,512 by the year 2000.
Within the region, Other Manufacturing rises from 348 to 879 in Other
South~entrat, compared to 408 in the low·case and 2,333 in the high
case. Anchor age employment remains at 1 , 100:
Construction
Major projects constructed statewide during the period 1975 to 2000 ··
in the intermediate case include oil treatment and shipment facilities
for the Lower Cook Inlet oil fields, two LNG plants and a major oil
refinery, the Beluga coal mine-mou~h power plant, facilities for opera-
~ion of the Kaparuk formation at Prudhoe Bay, development of the Prudhoe
Bay offshore oil field with pipeline capacity expansion, the Northwest
~aska ~as pipeline, and a small state capital campus somewhere in
Southcentral Alaska which conforms to the concept of a limited capital
mov~. Statewide, ·the level of construction employment on these major
projects reaches a peak of 11,800 in 1981, declining rapidly thereafter.
In the Southcentral region, exogenous construction·employment reaches
2,800 in 1981. ,
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Federal G~~~rnment
Federal government employment in Alaska has been growing very little
during the last ten years, the increases in.civilian employment being off-
set by declining military employment. The decline in military employment
has slowed or halted, however, and civilian employment is expected to con-
tinue to grow slowly. In the intermediate case, federal civilian employ-
ment rises at the same rate as in the low case--about 0.5 percent per
year. This results in federal civilian employment of about 21 thousand
statewide, and 12.,250 in the region by the year 2000. Military employ-
ment is assumed constant at 1975 levels.
State Government
The rate of growth of state government may be one of the key driving
forces in the Alaska economy,after construction. A fairly persuasive
story can be told about nearly any projected rate, but an annual rate of
two percent was assumed through 1990, and about 1.5 percent thereafter.
This is similar to the low case, but government growth continues after
1985.
In the intermediate case, it was assumed some sort of-limited state
capital move would take place which would transfer major central govern-
ment functions to a capital.campus somewhere in Southcentral Alaska--
possibly Willow. The number of positions involved in an immediate move
of just the legislature, commissioners, and the governor and their
immediate staffs was calculated at roughly 750 persons. Since some
growth in these staffs will probably occur by the time the move is
likely to be conducted, and other government operations may also move,
the task force assumed a move between 1982 and 1990 involving about
one thousand employees in two groups of 500. State government employ-
ment reaches 4,100 in Other Southcentral and 6,200 in Anchorage by the
year 2000, for a total of 10,300.
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Local Government
Local government growth is partly conditional upon local sources of
revenue, but also depends upon revenues available from federal sources
and the growth of demand for government services. In the intermediate
case, the projected rate of growth was .fixed at three percent, halfway
between the rates in the high and low cases.' This results in statewide
local government employment of about 29,000 in the year 2000, and
regional employment of 14,900.
Miscellaneous Assumptions
The Alaska economy is influenced by growth in U.S. per capita dispos-
able (after tax) income, wages, and prices, since these set bounds on the
ability of Alaska to encourage or discburage migration and increase the
real incomes of Alaskans. In the high case, real wages rise at 1.2 per-
cent per annum and real per capita disposable incomes at 2 percent. In
the low and intermediate cases, U.S. real per capita disposable income
and wages track the Data Resources, Inc., "pessimistic" long-term fore-
casts of 1.77 percent for real income and 1.0 percent for wages.
Government spending is again assumed proportional to expenditures
for government wages and salaries, just as in the high and low cases.
Finally, the exogenous components of transportation, public utilities,
and services represented by major basic projects such as the oil pipeline
was estimated. In the intermediate scenario, Beluga coal development do·es
not require a large support facility, although 90 persons are employed by
the coal-fired power plant. Most of the employment added by these large
projects in transportation, public utilities, and services is attributable
to the oil pipeline project and its continued operations. Long-term
employment in the intermediate case is estimated at 250 in transporta-
tion, about 1,000 in services, and 90 in public utilities.
Intermediate Case Methodology Used to Disaggregate
Regional Control Totals for the Three Subregions
The disaggregation methodology used in the intermediate case was
similar to that used in the high and low case. That is, specific pro-
jections of basic employment were made for the Anchorage, Other Cook
Inlet, Gulf of Alaska, and Kodiak-Shelikof subregions. The econometric
model produced an estimate of nonbasic, civilian employment in the
Anchorage subregion, while the model's estimate of Other Southcentral
nonbasic employment, computed by the model, ~as allocated to the thre~
remaining subregions by projecting specific ratios of nonbasic-to-basic
'emJ>loyment for Kodiak-Shelikof and Gulf of·Alaska subregions. The
remainder was allocated to Other.Cook Inlet. The resulting changes in
total civilian employment were used to estimate changes in population.
Each subregion's share of the change in total civilian employment in
each five-year period was used to allocate the corresponding five-year
regional change computed by the model of the non-Native, civil~an popu-
lation not directly engaged in large construction projects. Finally,·
exogenous construction employment, military population, and Native
population estimates were added for each subregion to give total sub-
regional population.
Specifically, the task force made the following assumptions. Basic
employment in Other Cook Inlet (Cook Inlet, less Anchorage) included
existing mining employment, all employment related to Lower Cook Inlet
oil and gas, one-fourth of Northern Gulf of Alaska oil employment, all
Beluga coal employment, 36 percent of lumber and wood products· employ-
ment by the year 2000, historic proportions of fishing, food man~facture,
pulp and paper, employment related to the compact capital move, low
growth in government employment, Pacific LNG and Lower Cook petrochemi-
cals employment, and all agricultural employment in the region. Gulf of
Alaska employment included existing mining, three-fourths of all direct
employment related to Northern Gulf lease sales 39 and 55, direct em-
ployment related to the Alpetco fuels refinery, 40 percent of lumber
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and wood products employment by the year 2000, historical proportions of
fishing and food processing employment, low growth in government employ-
ment with an addition of fifty local government workers during Alpetco
plant construction, and 500 transportation and service workers employed
in the operation of the oil pipeline. The Kodiak-Shelikof area employ-
ment featured all existing activity, all the oil exploratory activity
~elated to. federal OCS lease sale 46, 24 percent of lumber and wood
products employment in the region outside of Anchorage by the year 2000,
historical proportions of fisheries and food processing manufacturing,
anq slow government growth.
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Nonpa~dc employment was specifically projected for the Gulf of Alaska
~nq Kodiak-Shelikof s~bregions. Tpe major driving factors leading to
development of a support sector in these two subregions are the same as
tn the high case, but more modest in impact. Since the Valdez area can
be expected to develop a support sector comparable to that of the Kenai
Peninsula as a result of major refining and.oil transshipment operations
~mployment, in the area, the Gulf subregion ratio of nonbasic/basic employ-
~ent is assumed to change at the same rate as did the·nonbasic/basic ratio n • . .
in the Kenai-Cook Inlet census division between 1960 and 1975, the period
during which the Kenai oil shipment and manufacturing facilities were con-
structed and began operations. In Kodiak-Shelikof, many of the same
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factors are at wo+k as iri the high case broadening the support sector,
although basic employment is expected to be less. The same rate of
change in the nonbasic/ basic ratio was used in the intermediate case as
in the high case for the Kodiak-Shelikof subregion, giving approximately
the current Other Southcentral average for this ratio by 1996. The
remainder of Other Southcentral nonbasic employment was allocated to the
Other Cook Inlet subregion.
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Civilian, non-Native, nonconstruction population was allocated within
Other Southcentral by beginning with the state's estimate of 1975 popula-
tion by census division and then allocating region-wide population changes
as described in the text above. An exception was made for the Gulf of
Alaska region between 19?5 and 1980. In the intermediate case, 505 jobs
were lost from the subregional economy, about -7.9 percent of· the' total
gain in jobs in the region. This would have translated into a net civilian
population loss of 269 between 1975 and 1980. This seemed a little high
when compared to the low case, where .36 people were lost per lost job.
Consequently, the .36 ratio was imposed~ resulting in a population loss
of 181 people. The rest of 1975-1980 Other Southcentral population growth
was allocated proportionately between Kodiak-Shelikof and Other Cook Inlet.
Assumptions Used to Estimate Employmentand
Population in the Intermediate Case, 2000-2025
The same basic methodology was followed in the intermediate case as
in the high and low cases for the period after the year 2000. Since the
econometric model was considered unreliable that far in the future, the
task force made some simple assumptions concerning growth of basic sector
employment oy industry for Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral. The
task force then assumed a moving ratio of nonbasic employment to basic
employment. Finally, population was derived by estimating a population/
employment ratio for civilian, non-Native, nonconstruction population
and then adding Natives, military; and construction employees working on
large-scale projects to the resultant total.
The basic sector ass.umptions were as follows: Since, as in the low
and high cases, the task force could foresee no significant additional
prospects for the oil and gas industry in Southceli.tral after the year 2000,
the task force simply assumed that the industry stabilized at its level
in that year, with new, smaller finds replacing older fields. Since
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exogenous construction is dependent upon large-scale projects~ and none .
of these is foreseen in the intermediate case after the year 2000, exoge-
nous construction emploiroent was specified at its year 2000 level.
Federal civilian employment continued to increase after the year 2000
at the same rate as in the low case, and state government employment grew
at about the rate it grew between 1985 and 2000. The rate of growth of
local government employment was' assumed to be half the rate of increase
for this sector in the high case. Agriculture was beset with unfavorable
conditions for further growth in the intermediate case, so the year 2000
leve~ of employment was chosen for the period 2000 to 2025. Fisheries
W'ere being influenced by active replacement of foreign bottomfishing
effort in the year 2000. This process was assumed to continue with a
further .ten percent replacement between 2000 and 2025. Food manufactur-
ing employment due to this part of the fishing industry also was assumed
to increase by ten percent. Lumber and wood products may be using most
of their available timber lands by 2000. Consequently, employment in
this sector was assumed to stabilize by the year 2000. In contrast, it
is likely that the larger population base may begin to give rise to
import substitution arid some miscellaneous manufacturing other than
petrochemicals. This portion of Other Manufacturing was projected to
increase by 50 percent after the turn of the century. Total basic sector
employment in Anchorage increases 8,400-plus jobs after the turn of the
century in the intermediate case, about 27.5 percent. In Other South-
central, it grows 7,900 jobs, or about 33.7 percent. This compares with
increases for Anchorage of 4,100 jobs and Other Southcentral of 5,000
jobs in the low case and 15,200 and 24,200 jobs, respectively, in the
high case for the period 2000 to 2025.
The nonbasic/basic employment ratio was projected separately for
Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral. In Other Southcentral, the
nonbasic/basic ratio was assumed to continue to trend in the direction
of the "current" (1975) United States value of about 1.55, which it
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reaches in 2025. In the high case, this value for the ratio is reached
much so.oner--the year 2000--while in the low case, it only reaches about
1.38 (about twice its current level) in the year 2000, where it remains.
This puts the intermediate case about halfway between the high and low
case for support sector growth after the turn of the century. In Anchor-
age, the support sector was divided into "statewide" and "local-serving"_
components. The former was assumed to grow at the same rate as the
Anchorage basic sector, except local government. The local-serving
component was set equal to the statewide nonbasic/basic ·ratio times the
basic sector employment in Anchorage. The reason for the division was
that part of the employment in the Anchorage support sector, especially
in finance and transportation, provides many of the same headquarters
functions as thP hAR.if"' sector employment in Anchorage. Consequ~ully,
one would expect it to grow at about the rate of the basic sector in
Anchorage, except for local government, which has an obviously local
function in spite of being basic.
Civilian, no~-Native population not engaged in major construction
projects was estimated using year 2000 population to employment ratios,
allocated proportionately to subregions using year 2000 proportions.
Any other assumption than proportionality was judged too difficult to
defend. To this was added construction employment on major projects,
Native population, and military.
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INTERMEDIATE CASE PROJECTION RESULTS
FOR SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA 1975-2025
Growth to 2000
In the intermediate case, the economy of Southcentral Alaska more
than doubles in size before the year 2000., The rapid rate of growth in
this case puts total employment at 252.1 thousand by the year 2000, com-
pared with 198.2 thousand in the low case and 331.5 thousand in the high
case. This is about 25 thousand closer to low case than to the high.
The principal reason is, of course, that many of the "best guess" or
"most likely" assumptions were shaded toward the conservative end of the
range of possibilities outlined in the main body of the report. When it : ....
came to what the task force actually thought was the likeliest outcome of
a large group of possible scenarios of varying probabilities, the task
force was inclined to be conservative and to discount heavily the more
optimistic of their opinions.
Output
The Southcentral Alaska economy's gross output increased to 3.4 times
its 1975 level between 1975 and 2000 in the intermediate case. This was
about 29 per~ent more than the low case and about 25 percent less than the
high case. Table. AD.l reports the 1972 constant dollar industrial output
for Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral. Real output is dominated in
the 1980s, as it is in the other two cases, by the impact of several major
construction projects. The importance of oil and gas is shown by the
relatively low gross output in Other Southcentral in the 1990s. Fisheries ·
development, government growth, and ongoing oil and timber production keep
output from falling as far as in the low case, but they are unable to match
the relatively lucrative oil and gas industry. Non-oil and construction
output of the Other Southcentral economy grows at an average rate of
4.9 percent during the period 1975 to 2000, reaching $961 million (1972
dollars) in 2000. Anchorage non-oil output grows at a slower rate of
3.9 percent per year, reaching $3.7 billion.in the year 2000.
Year
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
AD-1/~
Table AD.l
Growth of Constant Dollar (Real) Output:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and
Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(Millions of 1972 Dollars)
Intermediate Development:
Other
Anchorage Southcentral
$1,281.6 $ 556.7
1,722.4 2,664.8
1,979.9 3,062.5
2,382.4 1,885.4
3,034.4 2,006.3
4,052.9 2,219.3
Southcentral
$1,838.3
4,387.2
5,042.4
4,267.8
5,040.7
6,272.2
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Employment
Civilian employment is projected to rise quite rapidly overall,
though not nearly as fast a:s in the high case. Table AD.2 shows total
employment for the intermediate case. As c.a.n be seen from the table,
total employment increases some 182 percent, which is considerably more
than the 121 percent increase in the low case, but which falls far short
of the 271 percent increase in the high case. There are several causal
factors which contribute to the difference.· Since a less elaborate
Alpetco project was assumed for this case than the high case, and since
oil exploration in the Western and Northern Gulf of.Alaska proves unsuc-
cessful, the amount of oil-related development is much lower. This tends
to depress the rate of increase. In addition, the smaller capital move
and the ~lower rate of increase in fisheries also tend to keep total
employment inc~eases below those in the high case. On the other hand,
there is an oil refinery built, the capital does move, and there is some
replacement of the foreign bottomfish effort; and these combine to make
the increase about 50 percent larger than in the low case.
Income
As in the other two cases, an important impact of economic growth
on. individuals is the effect on their incomes. Table AD.3 shows how per
capita income earned in Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral is affected
by the intermediate case. As in the other cases, the model does not give
a projection of residence-adjusted income; therefore, the total earned
income shown in the table may not capture the effects on income of the
resident population caused by the fact that some workers may be com-
muters or out-of-state workers. The table indicates that real incomes
plus transfers received increase some 195 percent over the 25-year
period, which compares to 298 percent in the high case and 135 percent
in the low case. The increase in real per capita income in the inter-
mediate case averages 0.9 percent per year, close to the low end of the
range established by the high and low cases (1.1 percent and 0. 8 percent,
Year
19-75
80
85
90
95
2000
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Table AD.2
Civilian Employment in Anchorage, Other Southcentral,
And Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(Number of Persons)
Intermediate Development:
Other
Anchorage Southcentral Southcentral
69,645 19,753 89,398
86,689 24,819 111,508
97,516 30,605 "!28,121
118,535 34,803 153,338·
148,430 42,025 190,455
197,178 54,944 252 ~·122
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Year
1975
80
85
90
95
2000
0
Year
) 1975
80
85
D 90
95
2000
0
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Table AD.3
Real Wage and Salary and Proprietor Income Earned
Plus Transfers, and Per Capita Income:
Anchorage, Other Southcentral, and
Southcentral Alaska, 1975-2000
(1967 Dollars)
Intermediate Development:
Anchorage
$ 962.4
1,112.3
1,313.8
1 ,641. 2
2,116.3
2,871.1'
Anchorage
$5,413
5,427
5,664
5,946
6,333
6,755
TOTAL INCOME (10 6 $)
Other
Southcentral
$ 299.3
315.3
430.6
495.4
625.6
851.8
PER CAPITA INCOME
Other
Southcentral
$5,789
6,112
6,614
. 6,576
6,914
7,380
s'outhcentral
$1,261.7
1,427.4
1,744.4
2,136.6
2,741.9
3,722.9
Southcentral
$5,498
5,563
5,872.
6,081
6,457
6,888.
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respectively). In the intermediate case, the only period in which real
per capita income does not increase is the period 1985 to 1990 (in Other
Southcentral). This is because of a decline in the number of high-
paying oil and gas·and construction jobs related to oil field develop-
ment between those years.
Population
The growth in the Southcentral regional economy causes net in-
migration to Southcentral Alaska, which in turn results in population
increases. Table AD.4 shows the growth of the population of Anchorage
and the balance of Southcentral in the intermediate development case.
As can be seen in the table, Anchorage shows a relatively rapid rate
of growth--3.6 percent, compared to 4.1 percent in the high case and
2.8 percent in the low case. Other Southcentral, which benefits from
the Alpetco project, limited capital move, some bottomfish development,
and forest products industry development in the intermediate. case, grows
quite a bit faster than in the low case: 3.3 percent, compared with
1.2 percent. However, the limited nature of this development and the·
lack of success in Gulf of Alaska oil exploration keep the rate of in-
crease well below the 5.5 percent in the high case. Overall, the rate
of increase of Southcentral population shown in the intermediate case is
3.5 percent--halfway between the high and low rates.
Distribution of Growth Among Industries
Table AD.5 shows the distribution of growth among four groups of
industries for the ·intermediate case. The "nonrenewable resource" basic
industries (mining, exogenous construction, exogenous transportation,
public utilities, services, and "other" manufacturing) grow rapidly until
the middle 1980s, then tail off until the end of the period. The pattern
is similar to the high case, but not so pronounced. The "renewable
resource" basic industries (agriculture-forestry-fisheries, food manu-
facturing, lumber and wood products, and pulp and paper) do not grow as
Year
1975
80
85
·go
95
2000
Average Annual
Rate of Growth
1975-2000
0
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Table AD.4
Population Growth: Southcentral Region,
1975-2000
(Thousands of Persons)
Intermediate Development:
Other
Anchorage Southce~tra1
117.8 51.7
205.2 54.9
232.0 64.5
276.0 75.2
334.2 90.4
425.0 115.4
3.6% 3.3%
Southcentral
229.5
260.1
296.5
351.2
424.6
540.4
3.5%
Year
1975
80
85
90
95
•2000
AD-20
Table AD.5
Projected Civilian Employment Growth by
Industry Group, Southcentral Alaska,
1975-2000
(Thousands of Persons)
Intermediate Development:
Nonrenewable Renewable Support
Resources Resources Government Sector
6.117 4.997 24.348 53.936
7.208 5.327 26.61.) 61.94S
6.865 5 •. 912 29.102 86.360
5.324 6.894 32.095 109.150
4.997 8.561 34.659 142.358
4.997 11.725 37.490 198.030
Total
89.398
101.098
128.239
153.463
190.575
252.242
'3
(J
'.0)
AD-21
fast as in the high case; but, in contrast to the low case, which shows
almost no employment growth in this sector, intermediate case renewable
resource industry employment grows by 123 percent by the year 2000.
Government growth also lies in-between the two previous cases.
Since state and local government grows somewhat faster than in the low
case because of the state capital move and lack of a ceiling on gov-
ernment employment, total government grows 80 percent more than the low
case. The growth is not. as great as in the high case because the state
capital does not move, fewer local government personnel are hired (partly
due to lower population), and federal government civilian employment
growth is assumed to be very conservative.
Reflecting the growth in the basic sector industries, the support
sector grows at a rate which lies about midway between the rates in the
high case and the low case. In Anchorage, the unqerlying development of
the Alaska economy keeps support sector growth at about the level one
would expect: between 1975 and 2000, the support sector grows 323 per-
cent, compared to 407 percent in the high case and 259 percent in the
low. Although Other Southcentral is more dependent upon local develop-
ments than Anchorage, the total growth in the support sector in this
part of the region grows 318 percent, compared to 129 percent in the
low case and 696 percent in the high.
Subregional Economic and Population
Growth, 1975 to 2000, Intermediate Case
Table AD.6 summarizes the population and civilian employment growth
at the subregional level for the period 1975 to 2000. The rates of
growth during the five-year subperiods were quite variable, highly
dependent upon which economic developments were occurring at the time.
For example, Other Cook Inlet is currently undergoing very rapid growth
Population:
1975-1980
1980-1990
1990-2000
1975-2000
..
AD-22
Table AD.6
Average Annual Growth in Population and
Civilian Employment', by Subregion, 1975-2000
Intermediate Development:
Other Gulf of Kodiak-
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof
2.9% 2.7% -3.1% 1.1%
3.0% 3.4% -0.2% 5.5%
4.4% 4.3% 4.1% 4.8%
3.6% 3.6% 0.8% 4.3%
tivi1ian Employment:
1.975-1980 2.6% 11.1% -1.8% 2.1%
-·
1980-1990 4~1%. 3.8% 0.3% ·2.6%
1990-2000 5.2% 4.7% 3.5% 5.4%
1975-2000 4.2% 5.6% 1.1% 3.6%
Total
. 2.5%
3.0%
4.4%
3.5%
3.3%
3.8%
5.1%
4.2%
)
)
AD-23
as the support sector employment in the Hatanuska-Susitna .Boroughs and
the Kenai Peninsula deepens, drawing many residents into the year-round
labor force. The Gulf of Alaska region shows. a drop in both employment
and population between 1975 and 1980 because the building of the Alpetco
project is not expected to employ as marty people as the pipeline did at
its peak. Subsequently, however, the deepening of the support sector and
the provision of many new basic sector jobs in petrochemicals (the Alpecto
refinery), lumber _and wood products, and fishing caus~ this area's popu-
lation to grow modestly over the period. as ~-whole. The l<odiak-Shelikof
region grows at a relatively fast clip during the 1980s ~· due to oil
exploration~ expansion of the bottomfishery~ and the increasing relative
size of the support sector. Anchorage grows at a steadily increasing
rate over the period in response to the growth in the state as a whole,
import substitution, and the municipality's continuing role as a trans-
portation~ governmental~ trade~ and financial center. Overall, the
intermediate case shows population and employment growth somewhat nearer
the rates in the low case than in the high case.
Post-2000 Results, Intermediate Case
The methodology used in the high case and low case was also extended
to the intermediate case. That is, basic employnient was estimated for
each applicable industry for the years 2000 to 2025, the nonbasic/basic
ratio was assumed to change in a specified manner, and the year 2000
·popuiation/employment ratio was applied to the estimate of total employ-
ment. The post-2000 development was distributed proportionately across
the subregions because, as before in the high and low case, results for
the post-2000 economy are not the result of analysis of individual sub-
regions. The results for 1975 to 2025 are shown in Table AD.7.
AD-24
Table AD.7
Southcentral Water Study
Intermediate Case Projections (INTSClO)
(Thousands)
Anchorage
Resident Population:
197.5 177.8
80 ~ 205.2
85 232.0
90 276.0
95 334.2
2000 425.0
05 444.5
10 465.1
15 486.5 .
20 509.4
2025 534.2
Other
Cook Inlet
31.2
35.6
42.6
49.5
59.3
75.5
84.2
90.8
98.0
106.1
115.1
· Basic Sector Civilian Employment
~mp1oyroent in Parenthes~s):
Non-Ag. Wage & Salary
1975 (23 .239) (4.460)
Civ;i.1tflll
1975 23.239 4.901
80 24.611 7.401
85 25.683 8.427
90 27~203 9.448
95 28.879 10.379
2000 30.634 12.242
05 32.124 12.890
:J-0 33.701 13.635
is 35.365 14.441
40 37.143 15.348
2025 39.069 16.372
!
Gulf of
Alaska
11.7
10.0
9.5
9.8
11.8
14.6
15.7
16.9
18.2
19.8
21.4
(1975 Wage and
(3. 779)
4.134
3.635
3.369
. 3.296
3.707
4 .. 374
4.606
4.872
~.160
5.484
5.850
Kodiak-
Shelikof
8.8
9.3
12.4
15.9
19.3
25.3
27.2
29.3
31.6
34.2
37.2
Salary
(2.376)
3.188
3~458
4.282
4.251
5.132
6.842
7.204
7.620
8.071
8.578
?-150
Total
229.5
260.1
296.5
351.2
424.6
540.4
571.6
602.1
634.3
669.5
707.9
(33.854)
35.462
39.105
41.761
44.188
48.097
54.092
56.824
59.828
63.037
66.553
70.441
AD~.25
Intermediate Case Projections (continued)
~
Other Gulf of Kodiak-
Anchorage Cook Inlet Alaska Shelikof ·Total
) Non-Basic Sector Civilian Employment:
1975 46.406 4.285 1.819' 1.426 53.936
80 54.418 8.153 1.812 1.663 66.046
85 71.833 10.124. 2.189 2.214 86.360
90 91.332 13.147 2.307 2.364 109.150
J 95 119.551 16.958 2.780 3.069 142.358
2000 166.544 23.581 3.499 4.406 198.030
05 174.586 25.584 3.796 4.780 208.746
10 182.996 27.864 4.134 5.206 220.200
:~) 15 191.774 30.381 4.508 5.677 .232.340
20 200.989 33.194. 4.925 6.202 245.310
2025 211.000' 36.370 5.397 6.796 259.563
:>. Total Civilian Employment (Excludes Self-Employed, Except
Fishing and Agriculture, and Military):
Non,....Ag. Wage & Salary Employment
1975 (69. 645) (8.745) (5. 598) (3.802) (87.790)
) Total Civilian Employment
1975 69.645 9.186 5.953 4.614 89.398
80 79.029 15.554 5.447 5.121 105.151
85 97.516 18.551 5.558 6.496 128.121
90 118.535 22.585 5.603 6.615 153.338
95 14~.430 27.337 6.487 8.201 190.455
)
2000 197.178 35.823 7.873 11.248 252.122
OS 206.710 38.474 8.402 11.984 265.570
10 216.697 41.499 9.006 12.826 280.028
15 227.139 44.822 9.668 13.748 295.377
20 238.132 48.542 10.409 14.780 311.863
J 2025 250.069 52.742 11.247 15.946 330.004
AD-26
Sensitivity Test: Northwest Gas Pipeline
As the work of the economics task force progressed, the members
became aware that the initial assessments they had made ~oncerning the
characteristics of certain large-scale development may have been incor-
re_ct. One·example of this was the Alpetco project, which the task force
initially assigned to the Kenai area. Subsequently, it was announced
that Alpetco had chosen Valdez as its site, and the report had to be
corrected for this fact.
Another example of a large-scale project for which the outcome is
highly questionable is the Northwest Alaska natural gas pipeline project.
The task force originally included this project in all three scenarios,
but it appears at this writing that the project may be significantly
delayed or never built. Consequently, the task force felt it was im-
portant to estimate the difference the lack of such a.project might
make to the Southcentral regional economy. A true sensitivity test is
difficult to do in this case for two reasons: (1) the construction and
operations activity directly involved with the project occurs outside
the region, which causes the regional effects to be dependent on a few
tenuous links between the state and regional models; and (2) it is im-
possible to estimate what psychological impacts on other development the
failure of such. a large project would have. Here, it has been assumed
that model structure correctly portrays the regional impacts and that
there is no deterrence to other major projects because the Northwest
pipeline is not built.
Table AD.8 summarizes the results of the sensitivity test. While
the impact is certainly noticeable, the Northwest pipeline is apparently
not crucial to the Southcentral regional economy. For example, by the
year 2000 it makes a difference of 1,100 jobs out of a total of 252 thou-
sand, about 0.4 percent in the intermediate case. Population is about
1980
1985
1990
:J-995
2000
)
AD-27
Table AD.8
Sensitivity of the Intermediate Case Southcentral
Economy to the Elimination of the Northwest
Alaska Natural Gas Pipeline
Civilian
Real Output Employment Real Income Population
(Millions of (Millions of
1972 Dollars) (Thousands) 1967 Dollars) (Thousands)
0 0 0 0
-13.8 -.514 -9.9 -4.5
-19.4 -.747 -14.2 -6.3
-22.1 -.740 -15.6 . -6.6
.:..31.2 -1.079 -22.6 -7.3
AD-28
7,300 lower than it otherwise would have been (probably including families
of workers who commute to the line), which is a.difference of 1.4 percent,
taking the intermediate case as a base. While the difference would be
somewhat larger or smaller with a larger or smaller economy, the sensi-
tivity test reveals that the outcome is not critically dependent upon
the natural gas pipeline project.
·.~
APPENDIX A
HISTORICAL DATA ON SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA'S ECONOMY
0
:].
c () Q
-. :Table .. A •. l.
·:rable .. A.L. {continued)
_1965 '"<> ill§. 1967 .l:lli. ... .!.2E.2. .!2.?.Q 1971 1972 .!ill 1974 1975P ..
. Other Southcent-ra1:
Agr.-Forestry-Fisheries 10.9 16.4 9.9 13.4 12.4 15.5 12.9 12.2 7.3 10.9 12.9
Mining 18.3 43.1 123.6 213.8 228.2 224.2 226.0 179.7 182,7 207.2 187.8
Construction 7.1 8.5 10.4 12.1 7.8 4.6 6.9 5.9 5.1 9,4 27.5
Manufacturing 14.2 18.8 15.6 18.7 13.5 18.4 18.6 19.9 34.2 26.0 34.6
Food 13.3 17.8 14.4 16.9 10.4 14.8 14.8 16.4 30.5 20.9 28.1
Lumber and Wood .2 .• 2 .2 .3 .5 .6 .9 .5 .6 1.6 2.7
Pulp and Paper 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Other .7 .8 1.0 1.5 2.6 3.0 2.9 3.0 3.1 3.5 3.8
Trans.-Comm.-P.U. 8.6 9.5 13.2 13.1 13.6 14.3 15.9 19.0 22.0 30.5 42.3
Transport 3.5 4·.1 7.2 6.4 6.9 5.9 5.0 5.1 5.8 11.6 16.6 > Air 1.5 1.6 1.8 2.4 2.6 2.2 1.7 1.9 2.0 2.{) 2.8 -I
N Other 2.0 2.5 5.4 4.0 4.3 3.7 3.3 3.2 3.8 9.6 13.8
Communications .!i .6 .6 .7 .7 2.3 3.9 5.9 7.8 8.9 11.2
Public lJtilities 4.6 4.8 5.4 6.0 6.0 6.1 7.0 8.0 8.4. 10.0 14.5
Trade 6.3 8.4 8.9 - 9 •. 3 10.8 10.6 10.3 11.0 11.2 13.8 21.5
l,'ho les.ale 1.5 2.4 2.1 .3 •. 0 3.6 3.1 2.5 2.9 2.4 3.8 7.2
Retail 4.8 6.0. 6.5 6.3 7.2 7.5 7.8 8.1 8.8 . 10.0 14.3
Finance 4.7 5.2 4.7 5.0 5.4 5.6 5.6 5.8 6.3 8.5 10.2
Services 4.3 5.2 5.6 5.9 5.7 5.7 5.9 6.3 7.7 9.2 10.0
Hotel .7 .8 ,8 .7 .6 .7 1.1 1.4 1.4 2.0
Personal .1 .2 .2 .2 .2 .2 .2 .3 .3 .2 detail
Business .9 1.3 1.5 1.6 .1.2 .9 .7 .5 1.0 1.4 not
Nedical .9 1.1 1.3 1.3 1.4 .. 1. 7 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 available
Other ~.7 1.8 1.8 2.1 2.3 2.2 2.2 2.3 3.1 -3.6
Government 2"2.6 20.4 21.7 20.5 22.4 22.5 22.2 17.8 18.1 19.8 20.9
Federal 17.1 14.0 15.0 13.5 • 14.8 13 .• 8 . 12.1 6.9 6.8 8.1 8.3
State/Local 5.5 6.4 6.7 7.0. 7.6 8.7 10.1 -10.9 11.3 11.7 12.6
Total 97.0 135.5 213.~ 311.8 319.8 321.4 324.3 277.6 294.6 335.5 367.7
p '!' preliminary
Source: Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska.
•
u u
rable A.l. (continued)
.!2M. 1966 1967 11§§..
Soutbcentra1 Total:
Agr.-Forestry-Fisheries 11.1 16.5 10.0 13.5
Mining 35.1 66.8 160.8 267.2
Construction 32.6 31.5 32.5 31.9
M.:mufacturing 22.8 28.7 23.9 28.4
Food 16.2 22.3 17.1 . 20.7
Lumber and Wood .3 .3 .4 .4
P4lp and Paper .1 .1 .1 .1
Other 6.2 6.0 6.3 .7.2
Trat,s. -Comm. -P. U. 60.7 64.5 72.2 79.1
Transport 27.6 31.3 .36.3 38.8
Air 15.8 ·19.5 21.9 24.8
Other 11.8 11.8 14.4 14.0·
Communications 19.7 19.4 20.1 23.1
Public Utilities 13.4 13.8 15.8 17.2
Trade 53.8 60.9 66.5 71.1
\,1tolesale 20.8 25,2 27.3 30~4
Retail 33.0 35.7 39.2 . 40.7
Finance 42.7 45.6 44.6 45.9
Service's 27.6 30.3 31.9 33.9
Hotel 3.0 3.4 3.5 3.3
Personal 2.6 2.8 3.0 3,3
Business 6.9 7.5 7.8 8.0
Hedical 5.6 6.2 6.6 7.1
Other 9.5 10.3 11.0 12.2
Government 153.9 153.0 156.1 156.4
Federal 133.4 130.5 132.0 130.7
State/Local 20.5 22.5 24.1 25.7
Total 440.3 497. 8. 598.5 727.4
..P = preliminary
Source: Institute of Social and Economic Research. University of Alaska.
u
1969 .1970
12.5 15.6
291.8 304.5
33 .• 0 32.5
23 .• 0 29.5
12.9 17.9
.6 1.0
.• 1 .1
9.4 10.5
89.1 98.6
45.3 49.5
29.5 31.4
15 .• 8 18.1
25.2 29.2
18 .• 6. 19.9
82;9 92.6
36 ..• 9' 41.0
46.0 51.6
5.0.4 60.9
38.8 43.7
4.0 4.4
3.3 .3.6
9.1 9.3
8 .• 3 9.4
14.1 17.0
156.1. 157.2
127.2 126.1
28.9 31.1
777.6 835.1
llli
13.1
303.3
38.0
30.9
: 18.0
1.4
.1
11.4
117.7
46.6
30.5
16.1
47.5
23.6
99.5
42.2 .
57.3
65.1
•47.0
4.5
3.7
9.2
10.4
19.2
164.1
128.6
35.5
878.7
I' . .J
1972
12.4
245.3
39.2
33.1
19.8
.9
.2
12.2
127,9
50.5
34.1·
16.1
50.5
26.9
105.6
45.2
60.4
73.5
51.0
5.2
3.9
8.6
12.1
21.2
159.7
119.8
·39.9
. 847.7
u ()
1973 liZi 1975P
7.4 11.0 13.0
240.3 254.9 267.7
37.0 54.7 81.5
48.9 41.0 53~4
34.9 24.6 34.0
1.1 2.3 4.0
.1 .2 .3
12.8 13.9 15.1
131.5 170.5 229.3
57.8 79.2 101.6 >
40.4 40.7 54.5 I
w
17.4 38.5 47.1
l-,3.4 53.4 78.5
30.3 37 .• 9 49.2
114.2 135.5 185.4
48.9 60.1 93.5
65.3 75.4 91.9
84.8 .97. 8 113.7
55.8 69.6 94.0
5.1 7.1
4.0 3.5 detail
9.6 14.9 not
13.3 14.5 available
23.8 29.6
164.1 186.1 176.2
122.0 140.3 126.9
42.1 45.8 49.3
884.0 1021.4 1214.2
Table A.l. (continued)
~ 1966 yg 1968 1969 .llZ.Q. !21!. 1972 1211 1974 l975P
State of Alaska:
Agr.-Forestry-Fisheries 31.9 38.0 20,9 30.4 24.2 35.9 29.1 24.7 13.9 23.6 31.9
Mining 50.4 82.8 180.8 298,0 410',5 403.9 378.8 295.6 . 281.4 301.9 386.7
Construction 52.4 47.2 ·48.4 48.5 53.4 54.4 . 58.6 61.3 59.6 107.6 196.6
Manufacturing 82.4 92.0 79.5 94.3 78.3 98.9 100.4 100.9 125.5 118.8· 135.3
Food 41.3 51.8 37.4 50.5 30.7 46.5 46.7 44.8 64.1 46.1 63.6
Lumber and Wood 8.8 10.6 13.9 13.8 14.0 16.0 16.2 16.7 20.4 23.1 20.9
Pulp and Paper 23.5. 21.1 19.5 19.9 21.5 23.3 23.7 24.7 25.5 32.2 30.2
Other 8.8 8.5 8.7 10.1 12.1 13.1 13.8 14.7 15.5 17.4 20.6
Trans.-Comm.-P.U. 135.3 145.3 152.1 161. ~ 180.6 184.9 209.2 225.3 239.1 309.9 430.7 > Transport 56.3 61.1 68.3 72.8 89.5 89.3 82.8 90.4 98.5 141.3 190.0 I
Air 32.1 37.0 '•1. 8 46.4. 58.9 55.8 52.3 57.5 64.1 68 •. 3 92.1 J:-.
Other 24.2 24.1 26.5 26.4 30.6 33.5 30.5 32.9 34.4 73.0 97.9
Communications 57.1 61.4 58.5 61..0 61.7 63.8 88.9 94.0 95.1 113.7 169.3
Public Utilities 21.9 22.8 25.3 27.9 29.4 31.8 37.5 40.9' 45.5 55.0 71.4
Trade 84.6 93.5 102.0 110.5 125.2 137.4 145.6 153.1 165.8 197.8 299.9
\o.'holesale 29.2 34.2 37.8 41.4 49.4 54.6 55.6 58.3 63.7 80.1 125.9
Retail 55.4 59.3 64.2 69.1 75.8 82.8 90.0 9L~o 8 102.1 117.8 1n.o
Finance 62.9 67.0 66.4 68.6 73.0 85.0 91.1 102.6 117.5 137.7 170.4
Services 45.7 48.0 52,2 55.9 62.6 67.3 72.6 79.8 86.5 108.1 153.2
Hota1 5.3 6.0 6.3 6.3 6.6 7.0 7.9 8.5 8.7 11.5
?e.csonal 4.1 4.5 4.6 5.0 5.1 5.4 5.4 5.7 5.6 5.0 detail
Business 10.5 10.6 11.6 13.1 16.0 14.7 15,1 14.6 15.0 23.4 not
•Hedical 10.0 10.4 10.8 11.3 12.6 13.8 15.0 17.5 19.2 21.7 available
Other 15.8 16.5 . 18.9 20.2 22,3 26;4 29.2 33.5 38.0 46.5
Government 284.2 290.6 297.5 293.9 297.5 303.2 306.0 299.2 307.7 351.3 318.7
Federal 238.2 .240.1 243.6 236.8 234.4 234.5 229.3 213.0 217.6 256.2 212.9
State/Local 46.0 50.5 53.9 57.1 63.1 68.7 76.7 86.2 90.1 95.1 105.8
Total 829.8 904.4 999.8 1161.8 1305.1 1370,9 1391.4 1342.5 1397.0 1656.7 2123.4
p "' preliminary
Source: Insti.tute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska.
u u· u (.V, u
Table A.2.
Non-Agricultural Wage and Salary E~ployment by Industry
·Study Subregion, Southcentral Alaska, and State
(Number of Persons)
Cook Inlet Subresion:
lli2. ill.§. ll2l ill! .!2§1 !2Z.Q. .liZ! 1972 1lli 1974 1975
Agr.-Forestry-Fisheries 39 30 38 57 85 87 103 1ao 233 235 250
Mining 694 1,007 1,591. 1,913 1.,:843 1,626 1,453 1,343 1,346 1,556 2,115
Contract Construction 3,509 3,393 3,687 3,738 3,963 .· 3,994 4,477 4,803 4,631 6,479 7,876
Manufacturing 1,211 1,183 1,079 1,218 1,499 1,710 1,841 1,965 2,159 2,384 2,774
Food 521 528 381 445 470 583 560 639 789 863 983
Lumber and Wood * * * * * * * * * * * Pulp and Paper * * * * * * * * * * * > I Other 649 624 651 728 944 1,021 1,119 1,212 1,242 1,282 1,392 V1
Trans;-Co~~.-P.U. 2,877 2,923 3,257 3,489 3:.928 4,350 5,019 . 4,960 5,120 6,213 8,203
T::-ansport 1,844 1,928 2,234 2,355 2,689 3,065 3,039 3,050 3,351 4,293 5,973
Air 799 887 ~,018 1,172 1,.388 1,537 1,495 1,670 1,873 2,173 2,685
Other 1,045 1,041 1,216 1,183 1,292 1,528 1.544 1.380 1,478 2,120 3,287
Communications 692 654 654 743 S:24 836 1,494 1,380. 1,192 1,304 1,575
Public Utilities 341 341 369 391 415 449 486 530 571 616 660
Trade 5,746 6,259 6,868 7,216 8,335 9,410 10,126 10,805 11,539 13,299 16,286
Wholesale 1,303 1,547 1,671 1,761 2,121 2,349 2,398 2,555 2,579 3,008 4,326
Retail 4,443 4, 712 5,197 5,455 6,214 7,061 7,728 8,250 8,960 10,291 11,959
Finance 1,402 1,477 1,468 1,571 1,,73.6 2,109 2,201 2,544 2,936 3,302 3,321
Services 4,180 4,580 4,921 5,331 6,205 7,049 7,677 8,516 9,287 11,215 14,533
Hotel 519 570 601 599 766 836 812 1,005 979 1,323 1,531
Personal· 417 • 450 464 506 517 554 576 582 602 600 652
Business 868 975. 1,041 1,090 1,244 1,301 1,285· 1,204 1,328 1,852 3,938
Medical 776 844 901 1,019 1,186 1,376 1,682 1,986 2,267 2,553 2,550
Other 1,600 1,741 1,914 2,117 2,493 2,982 3,322 3,739 4,109 4,887 5,862
Federal Government 9,691 9,665 9,774 9,521 9,162 9,776 . 9, 792 9,672 9, 778 10,158 10,490
State Government 1,989 2,177 2,242 2,367 2,546 2,872 3,619 4,119 4,306 4,646 4,796
Local Government 2,796 3,067 3,388 3,652 4,276 4,424 4,783 5,422 5,821 6,1131 7,239
Total 34,134 35,761 38,317 40,073 43,578 47,407 51,091 54,329 57,156 65,918 78,389
*Information suppressed to avoid disclosure of individual firm data.
Squ~ce:. ~,stil!la.ted. from Alaska Department of Labor Resear~h and Analysis Section Workshee~s.
fl
Table A.2. (continued)
Gulf of Alaska Subregion:
1965 1-1.6.§.. !ill 1:2§.§. lli.2. 121.Q. .ill1. 1972 1973 1974 1975 ----
Agr.~Forestry-Fisheries 13 24 0 1 0 0 2 24 50 37 58
Mini!lg * * * * * * * * * * *
Contract Construction 186 238 150 53 74 57 278 108 91 427 2,555
Manufacturing 138 158 144 165 220 212 130 193 315 224 227
Food 130 152 139 159 213 208 125 183 303 214 217
Lumber and Wood * * * * * * * * * * *
Pulp and Paper * * * * * * * * * * * Other * * * * * * * * * * * Trans.-Comm.-P.U. i38 110 109 94 90 97 98 121 167 221 473 :r Transport 114 83 80 67 67 74 70 92 106 155 392 0'\ Hr 39 24 19 23 23 29 16 19 23 '29 35
Other 75 59 61 44 44 45 54 73 83 126 357
Communications * * * * * * * * * * * 'P¥blic Utilities * * * * * '* * * * * * Trade 136 ' 147 149 139 158 165 149 138 159 230 495
Wholesale 16 24 25 27 48 52 35 19 20 44 62
Retail 120 123 124 122 120 113 114 119 139 186 433
Finance 16 :).8 20 18 18 23 26 30 39 75 76
Services 129 135 139 139 151 171 183 182 178 286 673
Hotel 40 31 37 27 30 43 72 76 80 155 198
Personal * * * * * * * * * * * Business * * * * * * * * * * * Medical * * .~ * * * * * * * *
Other 59 69 67 77 86 89 89 90 58 88 124
Federal Government 138 126: '103 110 '114 103 97 84 84 80 99
State Government 327 350 382 410 419 482 520 500 508 531 ~ 854 Local Government 112 118 113 85 107 134 171 190 204 252
Total 1,355 1,453 1,343 1,284 1,467 1,533 1,742 1,643 1,858 2,423 5,596
*Information suppressed to avoid disclosure of individual firm data.
(; u 0 u \.J Q
'I'able A.2. (continued)
Kodiak-Shelikof Subregion:
ill?. .~ 1967 .ill.!! . .ill1 1970 ill! 1972. 1973 1974 1975
Agr.~Forestry-Fisheries 0 13 13 16 22. 26 18 189 252. 282. 307
Mining * * * * * * * * * * * Contract Construction 312 291 191 .166 84 46 61 125 131 206 269
Manufacturing "630 831 1,014 811 664 743 768 866. 1,421 1,2.74 1,200
Food . 618 801 917 779 637 701 738 842 1,383 1.,220 1,134
Lumber and Wood * * * .}.* * * * * * * * Pulp and Paper * * * ·f: '* * * * * * * Other * * * '* * * * * * * * Trans.-Comm.-P.U. 142 161 226 227 236 216 267 -228 .223 264 219 :r Transport U7 126 . 192 196 209 181 197 121 168 200 160 '-J Air 37 43 51 57 6"2 53 47 51 59 75 87
Other 80 83 141 139 147. 128 150 70 109 125 73
Co=unications * * * * * * * * * * * Public Utilities '* * * * * * * * * ·* * Trade 211 324 331 319 326 346 343 355 394 429 484
Wholesale 10 10 13 11 :12 12 12 11 9 10 33
Retail 201 314 318 308 314 334 331 344 385 420 451
Fi.nance 36 40 43 /f7 51 59. 64 60 64 78 91
Services 196 215 193 166 168 191 241 232 268 302 357
Hotel 39 50 46 29 28 30 55 50 52 63 83
Personal * * * * * * * * * * * Business * * * * * * * * * * * "Medical 19 . 27 35 36 44 63 66 76 140 95 85
Other 96 107 99 94 92 91 112 95 63 134 189
Federal Government 541 541 539 504 449 387 351 272 263 244 269
State Government 77 94 111 140 143 167 160 190 178 168 199
Local Government 165 188 212 249 243 284 339 360 382 394 401
Total 2,310 2,710 2,876 2,650 2,395 2,469 2,619 2,878 3,576 3,641 3,802
*Information suppressed to avoid disclosure of individual firm data.
Table A.Z. (continued)
.Southcentral Alaska:
lli1 1966 1967. 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973. 1974 1975
Agr.•Forestry-Fisheries 52 67 52 74 107 113 123. 394 535 554 615
llining· 716 1,038 1,629 1,988 ' 1,968 .1. 720 1,549 1,417 1,409 1,616 2,201
Contract Construction 4,007 3,922 4,029 3,957 . 4,121 '. 4,097 ' 4,816 5,036 4,853 7,113 10,700
Manufacturing 1,979 2,173 2,237 2,195 2,383 2,665 2,739 3,024. 3,895 3,878 4,201
Food· 1,268 1,482 1,497' 1,383 1,320 1,494 1,422 1,664 2,475 2,297 2,334
Lumber and Wood * * * * * * * * * * * Pulp and Paper '* * * * * * *· * * * * Other 664 655 690. 761 975 1,055 1,150 1,242 1,290 1,326 1,427
Trans.-Comm.-P.U. 3,157 3,194 3,592 3,810, 4,254 4,664 5,384 5,308 5,510 6,698 8,900
:r-Transport 2,076 2,137 ·'· 2,506 2,618 2,965 3,320 3,306 3,263 3,625 4, 646' 6,525
Air 875 954' 1,088 1,252 1,473' 1,619 1,558 1,740 1,955 2,277 2,807 00
Other 1,201 1,183 1,419 1,367 1,483 1,701 l, 748 .. · 1,523 1,670 2;371' 3, 717
Communications 700 666 662 749' 828 .. 848, 1,542 1,462 1,253 . 1,376. 1,645
Public Utilities 382 391 423 443 462 496' 536 584 633 674 730
Trade 6,093 6, 730' 7,349 7,674 8,819. 9,920 10,6i8 11,298 12,.092 13,958 17,265
Wholesale. 1,328 1,581 1,709 1,799 2,181 2,413 2,445 . 3,674. 2,608 3,062 4,421
Retail 4,765 5,149 5,639. 5~885 6,648 7,508 8,.173 8, 713 9,484 10,897 . 12,843
Finance 1,454 1,535 1,531 '. 1,636 1,805 .. ·."· 2,191 2,291 2,634 3,039 3,456 3,988
Services 4,505 4,930 5,2,54 5,63~ 6,5~4 7,410 8,101 8,930 9,733 11,803. 15,573
Hotel 598 651\' 684 655' 824', 909' 939 1,131 1,111 1,541 1,812
Personal 427 464 475 515 523 563 585 595 617 612 673
.·Business .;. 906 999 ·1,048 1,092 1,245 1,302 1,288 1,207 1,329 1,858 4,236
~1edical 820 900 967 970 1,263 1,475 1,766 2,074 2,444 2,683 2,677
Other 1,755 1,917 2,080 2,288 2,671 3,162 3,523 3,924 4,230 5,109 6,175
Federal Government 10,370 10,332 10,lt16 10,136 9,725 10,266 10,240 10,02'8 10,125 10,482
~
10,858
State Government 2,393 2,621 2,736 2,917 3,109 3,521 4,299 4,809 4,993 5,345 13,490 Local Government 3,073 3,373 3,713 3,986 4,626 4,842 5,293 5,972 6,407 7,077
Total 37,799 39,915 42,536 44,008 47,440 51,409 55,452 58,850 62,590 71,983 87,789
*Informati?n supP.,ressed.~c>; avoid disclosure of individual firm data.
Individual entries may not add to total because of rounding errors.
. ·'
0 :)
Table A. 2'. 'cOn'tinued')
S'tate· of Alask-a:
3;965 ill.§:. &6.2 19-68 li.969 1:.?19. I?.Z.! 1972 1973 1974 1975
};gr.-Forestry-Fisheries 145· ])66 154 !46 t7-4 193 2'26 835 1.,040 1,031 1,013
Mining 1,088 1,.37·2 1,.967 2',A5·s l:\A94 2,.995 t,431 2,113 1,966 2,977 3;790
Contract Constt:uc:tion 6,455 5,864· 5>,.991 5,998 g;,,653i 6,,894 7o',.445· 7',.893 7,837 14,063 25,876
Manufacturing 6·,274 '6,634· 6,.621: 6·, 924 1!,.02'5) 7.,.S39 1·,,780 8,060 9,349 9',.612 9,639
Fo.od 3-,007 3·,.3.73: 3,090 3',.313' 31,,1!HJ 3:,741 3.,.612. 3,,745 4,576 4,.293 4,320
Lumber and Wood 1·,080 1,,266 1,616 1,570 ]).,581-1,M3 1, 7'54 1, . .799 2,177 2,395 2,176
Pulp and' Paper 1,228 1,.060 957 947 961 1,.016-1,010 1,013 1,.022 1,244 1,202 > Other 959 ·9:33 958 1,.09'3 !,2831 1,339 1,408 1,505 1,574 1,681 1,941 I
\.0 Trans .-Comm.-P .u •. 7,.2·67 7 ,.279 7,.483 7,.811 ff,.807 9,100 9,.808 9,993 10,.403 12,380 16,1,]3
Transport 4,.711 4,.7'09 5~062 5,309' a;, 272~ 6,.428 6,.116 6,365 6 ,.768 8,.534 11, 9'•3
Air 1,923 1,986 2,.230 2,49.2 3:,.132 3,.071 2,761 3,012. 3,266 3,975 •i ,782
Other 2,789 2,.,724 2,.8J2' 2,8H· 3\142; 3,.3'56 3,354 3,354 3,501 4,.557 7,16J
Communications 1,897 1,905 1,.725 1,764 lf.,Tlli 1 . .,857 2,.779 2,.693 2,.631 2,809 3,409
P·ublic Utilities 659 665 696 7'40 1-63 819: 913 935 1,,004 1,039 > 1,121
Trade 9,950 10,806 11,.754 12,519 1{3\,,946' 1'5,365 16,148 17,107 18,.337 21,135 26,209
Wholesale 1,853· 2,140 2,380 2,,554 2', 9-23 3,,245 3,224 3,347 3,405 4,049 5,909
Retail 8,096 8,666 9,.374 9,965 1!,024 1:2,.121 12,924 13,760 14,932 17,086 20,300
Finance 2,171 2,285. 2:,.315 ,2,483 2',.652 3,,.098 3,245 3', 713 4,243 4,894 6,029
Services 7,513 7,890 8,.692 9,.289 10>,486· 11,435 12,559 14,034 15,182 18,313 25,136
Hotel 1,030 1,.131 1,222 1,.21:6 :~;,.366 1,448 1,639 1,849 1,884 2,513 3,158
Personal 679 712 739 Sbo 825 852 878 905 869 868 922
Business 1,.397 1,.415 1,564· 1,756 2,128 1,999 2,010 2,061 2,070 2,887 7,318
H.:dical 1,453 1,·517 1,603 1, . .717 1,92.5 2,173 2,572 3,,005 3,368 3,828 4,330
Other 2,954 3,116 3',564 3,.801 4,145 4,.963 5·,402 6,218 6,991 8,218 9,408
Federal Government 17,429 17,.509 17,422 16,860 16,4-53 17,112 17,269 17,234 17,166 18,016 18,288
State Government 6·,994 1,,677 8·;105 8,,684 9,329 10,363 11,730 13,277 13,757 14,164 14,678
Local Government 5;240 .J,719 6,.284 6,.640 7,.548 ' 8,,078 8,.956 9,.987 10,.575 11,591 14,176
'Xotal 70,527 73,.193 76,.785· 79,802 86,563 92,465 97,585 104,244 109',85·2 128,177 161,308
Table A.3.
Wages and Salaries. by Place· of Work
and· Personal. Income by Place of Res-idence, i965-1975
(Thousanas of Dollars)·
1965 1966 1967 ill?.: l':l69' 11ZQ 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975
Cook InletSubregion
W;;1gesand Salaries 372,045 399,733 462,881 511,502 597,538 642,069 709,675 777,076 828,956 1,055,883 1,447,1~92
Personal Income 416,818 448,679 522,634 570,397 668;400 731,366 809,234 891,765. 991,585 1,263,057 1, 720,19:i
Real Income (1967 $) 442,482 448,679 522,634 555;943 631,161 667,304 716,771 769,426 820.,849 943,284. 1,129,479
Gulf of Alaska Subregion
Wages and Salaries 9,341 10,398 11,930 13,343 11,051 .16,336 18,889 19~5.20 21,433 40,656 185,903 :r
1-'
Personal Income 13,658 15~169 16,214 17,~46 18,459 23,382 25,915 26,444' 31,448 40,696 101;065 0
Real Income (1967 $) 14,499 15,169 16, ~14. l7 ,199 17,431 21,334. 22,954 22,816 26,033 30,393 66,359
Kodiak•Shelikof Subregion
Wages and Salaries 25,239 26,663 27,533 29,877 32~675. 36;427 39,938 33,094 42,210 49,549 59,971
·'Personal Income 30,689: 32,868 33,724 . 36,053' 39,870 45,731 49,905 43,452 57,936 65;717 77,503
Real Income (1967 $) 32,579 32,868 33,~24 35,193 37,649 41,!25 44,203 37,491 47,960 49,079 50,888
Southcentral Region
Wages and Salaries 406,625 436,794 502,·344 554,722 641,264 694,832 768,502 829,690 892,599 1,146,088 1,693,366
Personal Income 461,165 496,716 572,572 624,096 726,729 800,479 885,054 961,661 1,080,969 1,369,470 1,898,764
Real Income (1967 $) 489,559 496,716 572,572 608,281. 686,241 730,364 783,927 829,733 894,842 1,022,756 1,246,726
State
Wages a~d Salaries 759,000 811,000 891,000 978,000 1,110,000 1,243,000 1,360,000 1,477,000 1,621,000 2,167,000 3,449,000
Personal Income 858,000 926,000 1,017,000 1,110,000 1,244,000 1,410,000 1,563,000 1,698,000 2,006,000 2,429,000 3,443,000
Real Income (1967 $) 910,828 926,000 l,Ql7,000 1,081,871 1,174,693 1,286,496 1,384,410. 1,465,056. 1,660,596 1,814,040 2,260,670
Source: U,S,'Department of Collllllerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Economic Information System. August 1977 printouts.
,i965
,-Cook Inlet ,gubre_sion
~ • • • u"
Jl.nchorage ),()2,337
Kenai-Cook:Inlet -~·.446
;Matanuska-susitna "6',12~
·Sewal:'d )j2.13
'. To.ta1 119A:2l
,.Gu1·f .of ,Alas.ka •.. Subregion
.Cordova-,HcCarthy ;1 ~99,1
Vaid.ei..,chittna-Whitt·ier ,,2,396
•. . • ..·• '· • ' j. '
}ota1 .4,387
,Kod iak.,Sheliko.f ,Sub res ion
Kodi~.k 9,064
.so·uthcentral .Alaska ·.Total ;132,-572
State To.ta1. 265,192
'' '\.__) u u u
~Estimated July ·1-Res.ident ;:Popu:l;;ation, •:Study ·~Subregions
· · ' · !So:uthce:ot;ral ,A:!.as~ ,.and ~tat~, .1:9~5~1,97,5 ·
1966 .·196'7 ,19.68 1969 ·l97Cf1 ;1971
];05,9.25 ·107 ,8.17 lll 606'2 yl;,-14,,1:50 ",126;,333 131+,971 ,, . . .
<9,020 9,_400 ·U,300 :13J2~0 :1:{+;250 :14,204
Ji,,481 6,379 6 420 .;7 ··000 ,6,50.9 r7,2.93 .. · ,, . ,),. ·~ '·'
2 239 2,,1780 ,2,,860 J ..• 'J.:QO :;2,,336 :2,.578 <" ... 132,]:~0 ·];23,665 ),26;376 ~13;7.,:/I:QO ·!lft9,42~ 159;046
:1.~956 2;988 2;200 .2 .• ~40 ::1,,857 '), ;930
J,4M ;2_,28,1 .2,200 .. ;2,~00 ·3_,098 2_,932
4,405 :::4,369 .· 4_,400 .4,,•5/10 . 4 __ ,955 !:4,:862
;8_,,4,79 9,478 ·,9_~520 9,.8}0 •9 ,409 '9.,665
136,549 140,223 146,,100 151,810 '163.,792 173,573
271,505 277,906. 284,889 >;294,5.60 ·302,361 311,070
ill?.. .:>l9n ;1.97.4
:1{+3_,·255 •149,440 153,112
13,,830 ;13_,808 13>962
8,310 ~;586 ;9,, 787
,2,370 :2_,446 2;683
167;765 '174,280 .;179,5:44
·1,862 1,982 1,960
3_,464 3,,568 3,833
S,326 •5,,550 ·5.,793
.8,645 ·8,,868 9,232
~81,736 188,698 194,569
322,115 330;365 351,159
:1April._l979 Census of Population. Data may b~ lower ,than July l p_ar.tially due .to .seas:onality of ell\ployment, especially in fishing.
·~ . ' -
·. ·· • .S;pecial ;Census .taken in .october 1968 2tabulated ·113 ,522_.
i
.Source: ,~tate .of ,Alaska Department of .Labor Resea.rch .. and Analysis .Section, ·Population Estimates :by .Census Division.
1975
177,817
15,621
12,462
3,149
209,049
·:J>
I
I-''
1-'
2,003
9;639
11,6'42
8,801
229,492
404,634
.. _,
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
.. 1972
1973
1974
1975
Table A.5.
Consumer Price I{ldex for Urban Wage and Clerical Worker
Families of Two or More P~rsons
Anchorage, Alaska ... All I terns, Groups, and Sub groups ·
(October ~967 = 100)
Apparel and
All Items Food Housing Upkeep Transportation
94.2 96.8 92.2 95.0 96.1
100.0 100.0 96.8 100.7 97.2
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
102.6 101.3 103.2 103 .• 4 100.5
105.9 104.7 107.1 104.3 102.7
109.6 107.2 110.5 108.8 106.9
112.9 109.2 113.8 112.2 111.4
115.9 113.1 117.3 115.7 111.8
120.8 124.4 120.4 120.6 113.1
133.9 145.7 131.5 128.5 122.6
l52.3 167.6 152.7
. ·"" 138.6 134.6
.. 'i ' . . ··~
1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 -October Index cited
1969--1975 -Average Annual Index cited
Source: U.s. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labo;-.. S~atistics, Washington, D.C.
Health and
Recreation
94.5.
97.2
100.0
103.5.
> I
106.6 I-'
N
112.2
116.0
118.5
122.8
136.1
152.5
u
Port 1965 1966
Cook .Inlet S~bre$ion
~chen: age
Tonnage 1,080,094 . 1,008,999
:passengers 19 11
Homer
Tonnage 10,871 13,811
Passengers 1,353 2,328
Ninilchik
Tonnage N.\ NA
Pass.engers NA NA
sewar4
Tonnage . 37,462 49,326
l'!lssengers 4,185 2,954
~eldovia
Tonnage ?0~566 12,232
Passengers 180 2;026
South Side Alaska Penins~a
Tonnage NA NA
)?assen~ers NA NA
Tot a!
'fonnage 1,148,993 !,084,368
Pas~engers 4~737 7,319
I
u u u
Ta;ble A.6~
T~affic ~ So~thce~tra1 Alaska~ Por~s, 1965-1975
(Sho~~ Tons, ~pmb~r of Persons)
1967 !ill. 1969 .--1970 1971
1,406,128 1,310,981 1,807,405 1,936,976 1,782,064
4 ~A 1,754 1,954 2,840
22,957 17,424 ;1.9,488 189,748 52,564.
836 3,123 3,9H 5,Q74 5,850
NA NA NA NA NA
filA NA NA NA NA
90,857 117,329 60,084 29,309 126,664
2,757 2,987 1,443 1,712_ 2,041
51,589 15,321 92,713 98,145 18,944
1,477 881 1,33:1. 1,952 1;896
Nf-. 9;783,924 11,340,000 13,284,699 ;2,587,185
NA 408 435 . 227 370
1,571 t 53:!. 11,244,979 13,319,690 15,538,877 14,567,421
5,074 7,399 8,874 10,919 12,997
_.$.Q"r~e: Jl.eP..artl'!l~n_t ()! the APll'f, porps 9f Engineers. Waterborne C!;lmmerce of the United States, _J'art __ 4.
!ill 12..'l1 illi !ill_'
2,058,199 2,624,763 2,340,181 2,936,159
2,342 2,900
170,382 146,349 11,939 39,279 :r 7,052 8,666 10,511 11,215
1-' w
50 763
NA
61,726 51,913 71,844 382,051
·2,612 2,926 7,628 8,859
9,447 10,663 9,171 9,462
2,279 2,662 4,317 4,523
12,399,786 11,864,646 11,778,847 11,764,374
632 859 1,165 891
14,699,540 14,698,384 14,211,982 15,132,088
14,917 18,013 23,621 25,488
Tab~e A.6. (continued)
'
. ~ 1965 '1966 1967 1968 . 1969 1970 llZl 1972 1973 1974' 1975
Gulf of Alaska Subregion
Valdez
Tonnage 51,336 . 188,093 215,022 181,945 354,935 477,677 288,728 253,505 301,076 356,967 654,514
Passengers NA 3,789 NA NA NA 16,162 20,004 12,277 25.,297 25,577 25,039
Cordova
Tonnage 43,169 56,830 51,114 43,666 46,405 34,455 68,553 42;114 46,750 35,218 43,132
Passengers 3_,882 4,197 941 3,594 3,187 4,24_7 5,637 5,616 5,851 8,291 8,256
V!hitt,:l,.er
:Tonnage 177,249 NA NA 311,997·. 485,380 348,954 .713,290 646,609 392,491 666,315 667,112
~a~sengers NA NA 4,3_39 8,045 13,449 16,_535 18,.833 19,186 20,173 18,942
To~al
Torma'ge 271,7'54 244,9Z3 266,136 •/ 5'37 ,608 '886~720 861,086 1,070,571 942,228 740,317 1,058,500 1,364,758 >:· .Passengers 3,,8B2. 7"'98.6. 94L 7,933 . 11,232 33,858 42;176 36,726 50.,334 54,041 52,237 I
I-'' .;:-.
Kod!ak-Shelikof Subregion
Kodiak
109,645 Tonnage '127,584 2l2,675 133,247 .. 1l5,8.63 . 124,479 '148,444 192,963 236,612 . 217,024 329,639
" Passengers 3,219 3,790 6,407 3,755. . 4,959 5,839 7,985 9,717 10,875 11,846 12,350
o'1d Harbor ·
Ton1,1age NA .NA NA NA .NA .NA NA NA 3,166 1,416 732
:Pa'ssengers NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
Total
Tonnage 127,584 21.2.,675 .. 133,247 ... .. . / 109,645 .· :ns·,B63 124,479 148,444 192,963 239,778 218,440 330,371
" Passengers 3,219 3,790 6,407 3,755 4,959 5,,839 7,985 9,717 10,875 11,846 12,350
SOUTHCENTRAL REGION
Tonnage 1,548,331 1,541,96,6 1,.970,914 .11~892,232 14 ,322,273 .. 16,524,442 15,786,436 15,834,731 15,678,479 15,488,922 16,827,217
Passengers 11,838 19,095 12,422 19,087 25,065 50,616 63,158 61,360 79,222 89,508 90,075
.,
APPE~DIX B
SELECTED REGIONAL MODEL INPUTS AND OUTPUTS
j
J
J
)
Appendix B
Selected Regional Model Inputs and Outputs
Employment (Note: Suffix R5 denotes Anchorage, R4 denotes Other Southcentral)
Exogenous Industries (Basic Employment)
EMA9A ·
EMA9B
EMA9C
EMMF
EMML
EMMP
EMMO
EMP9
ECONX
EMPUX
EMS9X
EMTOX
EMGF
EMGS
EMGL
· EM99
Employment in agriculture (103 persons)
Employment in forestry (103 persons)
Employment in fisheries (103 persons)
Employment in food manufacturing (103 persons)
Employment in lumber and wood products (103 persons)
Employment in pulp and paper (103 persons)
Employment in other manufacturing (103 persons)
Employment in mining (103 persons)
· Exogenous construction employment (103 persons)
Exogenous public utilities employment (103 persons)
Exogenous services employment (103 persons)
Exogenous transportation employment (103 persons)
Employment by the federal government (103 persons)
Employment by the state government (103 persons)
Employment by local government (103 persons)
Total employment (103 persons)
Population (Note: Anchorage total and non-Native civilian population not
engaged in major construction projects has been adjusted upward in
the text by 20 thousand persons from t4e number shown in this appendix
to hit the 1978 population estimated by the Municipality of Anchorage.)
B-2
Population (continued)
CNNP2
POPNE
POPM
Non-Native civilian population not engaged in major
construction projects (103 persons)
Native population (10 3 persons)
Military population (includes only active duty military)
(103 persons)
0 f._) (J c' 0 0 0 0 t"\
.-.._.) v
High Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMA9AR4 EMA9AF~5 EMA9BF~4 EMA9r-:F::5 EMA9CR4 EMA9CR5
1980 0.089 o. o. o. 2. 467 . o.
19l11 0.089 o. o. o. 2. r-592 o.
1982 O.OB3 o. o. o. 2.753 o.
1983 0.091 o. (). o. ~!.961 Ot
19B4 0. :1. o. o. o. :~. ;:.~~~ 8 o.
1985 0.107 o. o. o. 3.573 o.
191:16 0 + :l:l. 2 o. o. o. ':~. El79 o.
1987 () + 1 :l.f:l o. o. o. 4.247 o.
198f:l . () .1.3~~ o • o. o. 4.6fJ9 o.
19B9 0.1.54 o. o. o. 5.21.9 o.
1990 (). :1. !36 o. o. o. ~).0~)~".) o.
1991 0 .2:?.4 o. o. o. 6. :r.n:~ o.
1992 0.274 o. o. o. 6' ~:'i39 o.
199:~ 0.341. o. o. o. 6.927 o.
1994 0.409 o. o. o. 7. :~49 o.
1995 0.4~)6, o. o. o. 7.f:l0"7 o.
1996 0.506 o. o. (), 8. 30:7i o.
1997 0.~37~".) o. o. o. 8. El4 ~'.i o.
1998 0. 64:~ o. o. o. 9.4:H o. t;l:1
1999 0.725 o. o. o. 10.06!3 o. I w
2000 0. f.l2~5 o. o. o. 10.76 o.
EMMFIH EMMFF::5 EMMU::4 EMMLI~5 EMMPR4 EMMF'F:5
1980 2.188 0.496 0. 3 :1.1. 0.148 o. o.
:l9f.!1 2. 2:3:1. 0. ~i29 o.~H9 0.1.4f.! o. o.
19B2 2. ~~B 0.~:)6~! o.:?26 0.14El o. o.
198:, ~~. ::~::~7 o.~)9~) 0. ~):33 0.1.4El o. o.
1.9B4 2.406 0.62B 0.34:1. 0. :l4B o. o.
198~5 2. 48~':i . 0.662 ().:34(? 0.14B (), o.
1.9G6 2. ~:iB2 0.6';'~) () + 3 ~:'i "i' 0.1.4Sl o. 0.
1.987 2.698 o. "i'::.~s 0.365 0.148 o. o.
19El8 2.8:3El 0.761 o.:374 0.14£-l o. o.
17'89 3.00B o./'94 0. ;·5B2 0.148 o. o.
1990 ~5. 2~) o.Hv 0.391 0 + 140 o. o.
1991. ~~.3:1.9 0.!36 0.4 0.148 o. o.
1. 992 ::~. 4 :L o.n9~5 0.409 o. :1.48 o. o.
1. 99:? :3. t31 0.9~~6 0.4:1.9 0.14B o. o.
:1.994 3. 6:1.3 0.9~.'i9 0.42B 0.148 o. o.
19S'5 :3. 724 0.992 0 • 4::iB 0.148 o. o.
1996 ~;.841 :1 .• () :?. ~.) 0.44!3 o. :1.48 0. o.
:l997 3.964 :l • 0~50 0. 4~'.iB (). 140 o. o.
1.998 4. 0'?"7 :1. + 091. ().469 0.1.4B (). o.
:l999 4.23b" 1 .• :1.24 0.4~:J 0.148 o. o.
:wo () 4 + ~584 ' :L • :1. ~'5? <>. 4'7' :L 0.:1.40 o. o.
High Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMMOf-<4 EMMOF<5 'EMF'9F<4 EMP9f(5 ECONXR4 ECONXR5
1980 (). 398 1.1 , l~:·"r.'') ........ J ~.) ..... :1 .• 009 2 •. 1.32 0,626
1 S1B1 0.458 1.1 :~. o::l 1.009 6.41.7 0.524
17'02 0, 4~.'iB 1.1 3.'7f.>2 1.009 ~j. 9~)2 0.027
19f.l~5 o. 4~:in 3..1 4.:::19 :1 .• 009 (,,. :1.1 o.
19!34 :~, 3B~~ 1. :1. 4.1"79 1.009 2.6?6 o.
19El~5 2. 44:3 :L • 1 4.649 1.009 2.4El'l 0.
19f:l6 2.443 1.1 4. u~ 7 1.009 ::.~ + 2 c, o.
19B'7 2. 38~5 1.1 3.892 1.009 2.044 0.
19!38 2.~1:~~~ 1.1 4.44B 1.009 3. :1.:::14 o.
1989 2. :5:'5::~ 1.1 :5.:147 1. 00'? 1.995 o.
19'1'0 2. 3~5:~ 1.:!. 3. ~)51 :L, 009 :L, 1. ~:;5 o.
1991 ;;~. ~5~3~3 :L.1 :~. 249 1. 00'1 0. 77:3 o.
1992 2. ~5~~:5 1.1 2. :~9::; 1. 00'7 o. 725 o.
:L 9~~~? ,, .. 1. .. .,. ... ,
..... \o)\o")..,.") :1..1 1 • 24:1 1.009 0. 72~3 o.
199•l 2. 3::.;:.; 1. • :1. :L. 24:-1 :L.OO'i' ().72~) 0.
199~'.) 2. 3:3:'5 1.1 l.. 24:5 1.009 0.075 o.
:1.996 2. 33~~ 1.:1. 1. 24:5 1.009 o.on:; o.
1997 2. 3]:3 :L • :1. :L. 24:·~ 1.009 0.07~5 o.
199S :~. :n::; :l • :l 1. ~;~4:-1 1.009 () " ... ,. o. • \1/;J
1999 ;,~. 3:5:3 3..1. :1 •• 24:3 1.009 0.075 o. to
I
2000 2.333 :1 .• :1. :1 •• ~?.4:5 :1 •• 009 0.075 o. ~
...
EMF'LJXR4 EMTOXF~4 EMS9XH4 EMGFR4 EMGFR5 EMGSR4
1980 o. (). :5 o.o::-'i 1.486 ::~2. :·~32 2.0:~::;
1981 o. (' ,,.
6 ~ ~~ (). 09 l.. 5:~6 2;!. 4 7!3 2.245
1c1B2 o. () • ~i o.:L2 1. :':192 22. f.>26 2. A~~~
19f.i:~ o. (). ~i (). :L 2 :1.. f.>!:)2 ~!2. ?76 2.7:5
19134 (),09 0.5 (). :l :L. i' :1.7 22.92!3 3.01
H'B5 0.09 () . ~) o.os l.. 7B6 23.01:12 --.. , .!> • -~ ·-
:1.9Df.> 0. :1.2 (). ~) (). 06 :1 "'"'"'' • + ..;),J . ...J 2::>. 2:m :~.~)54
19G7 0.12 () • :'.i o.<M 1.929 23.395 3.G03
1.9BB 0.:1.2 (). !'5 0.06 2.009 ,.) • ...,. l::·r.:"'l!:"
... \."). ,..] .... J~ ·1. 074
19f:l9 0. :t:~ 0.5 0.:1.2 2.094 :?.:5.7.1.7 4.362
1990 (). :1.2 (). !~i:3 0.06 ~~.1.Bb ~~3! BB2 4.67
1991 () d~'! () • ~.'i :5 o. 2.:1.95 24. 4. S1 69
1992 () .u 0. ;)3 o. :;! • ;.~06 . 24. :1. l8 5.287
l. 9'?:;) 0. :1.2 () • ~) ::1 o. 2.:1.44 24.238 5. c>26
19'?4 0.1.2 ().53 o. ~~ + 226 24.36 5.987
1995 0.12 0 .5:~ o. 2.236 24.482 6. :~7
1996 0.12 ().~3:3 o. t"). , ·=··:~ .... ·~;;:1-...J 24 .I.) 6.b64
1997 0.12 0. ~)3 o. 2 • 2'/~S 24.719 6.971
1998 0.12 0.53 o. 2.295 24.839 7.292
1999 0.12 0.53 o. 2.:515 24.96 7.628
2000 0.12 0. ~:;:5 o. 2.336 25.0(:12 7.98
0 u 0 u 0 0 0 0
High Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMGSF~5 .EMGU~4 EMGLR5
1.980 4.75 2.47 6.0
1981 4.827 2. 70f:l 6.935
19B2 4.906 2.969 7.0?2
19K~ 4.9f:l6 3. 2:i4 7.2:1.2
:1.984 5.06'7 3.:'.'i67 '7. ~554
l.98~5 5.15 ~~. 91 7. ~5
:J. 9Bc, ~5 • ::.~ ~:; c.) 4.:1.79 7.644
l9B'7 .::· ••y (. ..... .... J. ~~.;')(,),~ 4. 46.~5 7. /'91
1988 ::-;. 4 73 4. /'72 7.941
1989 !:).~)85 5. :l 8.094
1990 :':i. 7 5-. 4~5 B.25
1991 :':i. 806 5.71.~~ 8.413
1992 ~.). 9:1.4 5. <?s<;; 8.58
i<;>93 6.0;.~4 6.279 8.749
1.994 6.:1.:36 6. ~'if:l2 8.923
199!5 6 ,.,.,,. 6.9 9t1 o:l ..... ,,) I :l99b 6.~~84 7.218 9.273 \..11
1997 6. 521. 7. ~i49 9.45
199a 6.661 7.B97 9.63
1999 6.804 8.:M 9.813
2000 6.95 8.64 :LO.
High Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMCN:I.I\4 EMCN:I.F~5 EMCMF~4 EMCMI\5 EMTAF~4 EMTAR5
19f:l0 2.:1.2729 ~:i. 74044 (). ~)79f:li'7 :l. 97t.d2 0 • u, () 7 ,:, 4 5.393
19Bl 3. 406<H 6.2:1.602 (). 40:·3:'~'?2 2.:1.0671 () .1. '7()'/'27 b. 4'1835
19B:~ ~3 t :=jC7:f.45 6. ~~002~~ 0,406:':l:t9 2. 12304 0. Hl06~52 6. :uo~.'i9
19B:5 3.92<!,7 6 t 66C757 (). 42279t3 :.:.~. 2 :l ~i~~5 0. :L9211. 7 6. 96'102
1904 3. 40;!9~5 6.ao;s:r.6 0.4:'54Hl4 2.27944 0. :1. 943;.'i7 7.19775
19B5 ~".S.69::.~B1 7.::!4026 0. 4;50854 2. :3'7~~74 o.:I.9404:L 7. 720~)5
19(!6 3.BB646 7.67276 0 • 4f.,94B3 2.47973 0. Hl9786 !3.365:52
1987 4. 304<!J8 B.00797 0.40663:1. 2. 57'705 o.:J.B7J.79 8.fJ3742
1988 •l.74:1.'i' 8.47143 0 • 50:3c:,54 2.67:'.'i7B 0. :l95:~4 9.5B682
19f:l9 4.68-479 8 • f:l92B2 o.;'52:!.W1' 2. 7BU2 0. :I.E>4446 10.2402
1990 4. 769tl2 9. ;?,()498 (). 539:~67 2. 8!:127(1 0. 1852~~9 10.8/'07
199:1. 4. 9::57'::.~4 9. :'.'it:d. :~4 (). 55~)19 2.97!:'i16 0.1B1514 11.3tiOJ.
1992 ::'i. 2::~41. :1. 9.94046 0. ;,)'7257 ~5. 0'770'7 O.:I.67B49 12.0002
199~5 5. ~:57!59~5 10, :5/'61. 0 • ~57'26B4 3 .195~iG ().141051 12.8"1~)5
1994 6.0029B :L0.'7435 0. 612:1.79 3.3:1.102 o. :t41Bn 13.b649
199~i 6 • Hl'7::'i8 :1. :1.. ::~4::'i9 0.632693 :~. 4~5~~()6 o.142'·!H 14.5~)43
19C/6 6 • .',~'i2:~:l :l:l + F.J~~C7!:J (). 6~i4~'i:'5~'i 3.~56~566 0.:1.4:3:~40 15. 5B7\2
1997 7. :LM77 :l~!..46B2 0.67966 ~5. 'i' 146~) 0.144224 16 d:1276.
1(798 7. 7:.1151 :1.~~. :1.~5'74 0.'703B84 3.06101 0.145097 1!3.0704
1<199 8.3!36~i:l. 1~~. 869~.'i 0 .'72<7329 4.0:1.~)!54 ().145984 19.4277 t::d
. 2000 9.051~)8 14.444tl o. n)c,oo~l 4.17B37 0.146875 20.9082 I
0\
EMTOR4 EMTCJF~~j EMF'UF~4 EMPUF~~) EMFm4 EMFIF\5
l. 9€)0 0. 7<!!0286 :L.6:':145:l 0. :~52'7F.l9 0.9:1.9091 0.4:1.9775 4.96199
198:1. 0. 90B7~57 1.ns67 0 + :~9'7::;09 1.<>1:~6, 0. 4El2526 5.6398
19H:~ 0. 9B Hl~'i 1.'77iJ62 (). 4 12~3:'59 1.0~500:1. (). 50~1606 5.76545
19E.l3 1. 07C,2El 1. El'74!:i4 0. 4:~2DO :1. :1 .• 1. ()7 0, 5~5:~G97 6.32'713
19El4 1. oc,on l..S\30:::>2 0. 4!:'i692<!'! 1..1~51.96 0.~)67731 6.66754
1905 :1.. on:57 2.02.1.92 0.476104 1.226B 0. 5'7'~)6 43 7.23981
19H6 :L. o::'iB6B 2.:1.~5:30:1. ().492fl64 1.3192 0.620192 7.96131
19B7 1. 06605 ::.:.2:1.8'7f:l (). 514!:'i66 3..39173 0. f.>5'2Hl4 8.1~)0'78
1C7flf:l 1.. :1.4f.d. 2. ~n69 0.53BB:I.:'S 1..49~127 0.608202 8.79478
19fN :L. 0696:3 2 • 44:3B6 0. 5~'i2371 l .• !5l3M:l 0.70El456 9.25919
199() 1.. ()/'(1'4::.! 2. ~:.:;2284 () .''5'70976 1. 6!::ibB:3 (). 7:~b3!:19 9.56125
1991 :1.. ()629:'5 2.6:1.274 (). !:)'06922 1.. /':3749 0. /'604~) 10.241
1992 0.9042:1.8 2. 708:1. :L 0. 6060:3'7 1. 824:1.5 0. 78(?4;'.'~8 10.6311
1993 (). 8:1.7004 2. 017~5:'5 (). 6;?.~)6~! 1 1.924'76 O.El19298 11.0827
1994 0. :3:?;6669 2.909:1.8 (). 6:':i04El~~ 2.01044 o.B57429 11.5958
1995 o.B46'726 3. 0:3436 0. 6/'0:1.~! 2.12!:!78 0.887719 12.3518
1996 0 + Cjf.,'7083 ~5 • HI:I.Bl (). 69:'54<!')3 2 + ~~7042 0.927031 13.4312
1 <;'9'7 0.888394 ~~. :1:171 '7 0. 722:578 2. 422~!3 0.96936 14.3863
199!:1 0. 9:l0449 3. 50f.,BB 0.751286 2.59097 1.01446 15.6765
1999 0.933521 3.68149 0.781866 2.76765 1· 06283 16.8063
2000 0.957644 3.82203 0.814661 2.91206 1.11505 17.7068
·-~-·-·--·
() 0 0 0 0 0
High Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMDWF~4 EMDWF~!'5 EMDF~F~4 EMrWiJ:;;~:; EMS9I:;;4 EMS9R5
19El0 0. (.,09:511 7.rl4:l94 ;5 .3.T77~:i 14.484:1. 5. ~~0948 16.3622
19f:l:l 0. 940~'i47 9.::?.462fJ 3.92908 1/.,.1.241 9.49216 18.7464
19B2 :t. 0067'8 9.04652 4. :J. 9~)~'i4 16.44/'9 10.H105 19.1882
190~1 :t.. :l :1.723 9,B4324 4 • ~)7 () 'i'1 :1. 'i' • 7 f:l !3:3 1:J. • ~~() 6 21. 16•t
19f:l4 :1., O:I.~.'i48 10. :1. :1. BB ~5. ()~~:.158 :lf:l. ~'i944 9.72:1.51 .,.., .. , ... : '"~c:" .:.:..:...~0.: .. -.J
l. <;'B~'i :1. • 06~)63 :1.0.76!'59 ~:;,if :1. !'5:.~B :1.9.924!') 10.400~? 24.4118
19Bt', :1.. :1.012!'5 11. !:'i60l ~5. 7!'.)903 21. !5709 11 .• 0324 27.0107
19Cl7 :t. :J. <?626 1::!.. :1.:::; 6.2:1.76!5 22. B76:?. 1. :;~ • !''i1. 2 4 2<{.1016
19f:lB 1.;52401. :t3.on'i~'i 6. 74f:l24 24.'703!3 1.4.09'72 32.1016
19!:!9 :1 .• 2fJ 1. 92 :1.;5, B02:.~ 7. o:::;:n 1. 26.3993 14. 008~~ :34.9373 td
199() 1. ~".\0449 :1.4.54f.,6 7. 40:1.1. 2/', Ml09 1.4.1.999 35.899 I
1991. :l • :3;36H4 :1.~5. :1.~)91 7. 1:)~.)664 29.1.;-.)94 :1.4.7()4<7 37. 39;~5 -..J
:J.?<n 1., :~B01.~! :l!5,B977 B, ~H 74 30. ns25 1.!7i. El055 39.1542
1993 1 .• 4:~297 :1.6.!:1796 !3. f:lO :J. ~".\B 32.6066 1.7.:1.0()6 40.9928
1994 1. ~52'776 1'7. ~~043 9. 4:3::~94 3~'). 4271 1B.7461 42.5827
1995 1 .• 5n3:~ 1B.1.49 9.9452b 35. O!:lElB 19.4664 45.9911
1996 1.6872 19. :1.4!:-iB 10.62~~9 36.9El44 =H. 303 · 49.9201
1<7'97 1.!3:1.~509 20. 20~57 :l.l • ~".\'7 J.. 7 39. o:HB ;~~1.374 5'l, :l6A1
3.998 :t.n)103 21. ~'iBB7 12.1.B75 41..31.71 25.MJ94 58. 902~)
1999 2.:to:H6 22.61 1 ;:; • OB:'i~"i 43.6765 28.30()8 63.9229
2000 2.2727 23. •l878 14.07:53 45.372 31.2618 66.6502
High Case Population (10 3 persons)
1900
19B1
1982
198~)
1904
J.9tl~)
1986
1987
1980
19!39
1990
1991
1992
1Ci1 9~5.
1.994
199!3
1(?96
1.997
199C!
19(?9
2000
1980
191:!1
1982
:1.98:1
19f:J4
198~i
l9Elt'>
1. 9f:l7
19B8
1.989
1990
1991
• 1.992
17'93
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
CNNP::?.f~4
49.2459
6:3.2747
60.40:1.9
75. :34BEl
7B. 3~599
a:~. 1. :1.46
86.6514
9:~. ()389
10:1., B~:4
:to~~. 463
:LOB, ~51'9
:t:r.::!. :tns
. 1:1.6.52:l
120.6tl
128.9~~
1:34. 6!:)9
:1.4~5.36
1!32.917
16~~. :n
174. 7::!4
:L87.3n"i
POPI:::4
5(,:>. !:)b~1C>
7f.l.0265
B2 • 8::?f:l7
90.0965
09.!3297
9•l. ~5~)45
j c;B.0267
:to::). :r. 64
:1.14. 4:?.!3
1. :l.!;i. OB
11.:1. 9. 3:~2
122.S127
:1. ~~'/'. 406
:1. :u • nH
140.:l92
145.464
1.54. 363
164.122
174.721
186 •. 34!5
199.21
1.66.29
1B0.6H5
1.B~5.6::w
:r. 9~5. J()C,
. 203. :313:1.
2:1.~).3~i9
2:·w. 04f.>
24:1..613
2~i7 ,cnc?
27:3.;1.42
20:~. 4b9
295.2:1.B
~~07. '/' f.d.
:n:.:~. 9f:l~5
~~!'50. :30B -
:r;o. 64B
392.098
4 :l ~). f.l~!'7
440. ;~62
4!':i8. ()7J.
:lB6.026
2()0. 4~)9
20:5. ()!'!i"9
... ) ..... 1:;• ·") .... ,:) ,.) . ,. ...
2!:i0. 042
26:1..76€1
2'713. ~~94
~504. :1. :1.7
~~16. o::w
~52B, '7!5~5
:H3. 29~-->
:~~)4. ~~:~9
371. 9;!.8
392.:07
4:1.4.0:1.9
4~~7. 946
462. ~)82
480. ~'i95
F'OF'MF~4
0.836244
0. 8::)6244
o.K~6244
0. 8~~6244
0 .8~~6244
0.!336244
0. B:36244
o. n::~c',244
0.036244
0.036244
o.n:?i6244
0, B:3b244
0 .B~{b244
0. B:36244
0. H:·5,',244
() .• 0:36244
(). f:l~56244
0. 8:36244
o. o;:{6244
0~!336244
0.836244
F'OF'MI:;:::'i F'OF'NE4 F'OPNE5
12.0!31.7 7. ~~~)1.56 7.02763
12.0!:117 7. 498~)9 7.16H1B
12.0017 7. 6485!':i 7.:H154
1.2.0817 7.EJO:J.52 7. •l:.'i777
12.0lH7 7. 9~i7::i5 /'. 60C,i?2
:1.2,0B1'7 8.11.669 7.75905
12.0!317 8.27902 7.91.423
12.0f.l17 8. 444/, 8.0725:1.
:L2.0f:l:l7 f3 .1.,:1.:349 8.2339;3
12.0B17 f:l. 7f.J!:'i75 f:l. 3986~~
:L2.0B1'7 f.l. 96146 8.~jt,66
1=~.0!31.7 9 ~ :1. 40t,8 8.73792
12.0D:L'J 9.32349 8.91268
:1.2.0f:l17 9, !'.W996 9. ()<?()93
12.0!:!:1.7 9. 700:1.5 9. 2?274.
:l2, Ol:l:L 7 9.!39415 9,4!''iEl19
1~.!. Of:l17 10.092 9.647~~5
12.0!317 10.29~39 9.El4029 td 12.0017 10.4997 10.0371 I
12,0817 10.7097 10.2:378 00
12.0817 10.9239 10.4426
() (J G 0 0 0 '-.) 0
Low Case Employment (103 persons)
Ei'!A9AI1:4 EMA9,:)f~5 EMA9BIH EN,!\9BR5 EMA9CI1:4 EMA9CR5
19FJO O.OB4 0+ o. o. 2 • O~H o.
1981. 0.0'78 o. o. o. 2, O~H o.
198~! 0.0'78 (), o. o. 2. o::n o.
1.983 0.064 (), o. o. 2.0~)1 o.
1.984 0. 06:3 o. o. (), 2. O~H o.
19f:l~'i 0.04f:l o. o. o. 2.o:n (),
19f.l6 o. o:.H! o. o. o. ;! • o:H o.
1.1t87 0.029 o. o. o. 2.0:11 o.
19f.l8 (). 02:-s o. o. o. 2.031 o.
19El.9 0.016 o. o. o. 2.031 o.
1990 o. o. o. o. 2.o:~:l o.
1991 o. o. o. o. 2. o:H o.
17'92 o. o. o. o. 2.0:H o.
1. 99~~ o. o. o. o. 2.0:11 () .
1994 o. o. o. o. 2. 0~5:1. o.
1995 o. o. o. o. 2.031. o.
1996 o. (), o. o. 2. O~'H o.
1997 o. o. o. o. 2. o:n o.
19913 o. o. o. o. ::.~ , () ~5 :L . 0.
1999 o. o. (), o. 2.031 o. t:d
2000 o. o. o. o. 2 .<>:H o. I
\0
EMMFF'~4 EMMFH5 EMMU~4 EMMI_R5 EMMPR4 EMMPR5
1980 2.003 .0.~~31 0.292 0.148 ()., o.
1.981 ;,! • oo:3 o.:B:l 0+29~:5 0 .1.4B o. o.
1. 9fJ2 2. 00:3 0 • ~5~H 0.298 0.148 o. o.
19tl:3 2,()()3 0, ~L3:1. (),30:1. 0.148 o. 0.
19B4 2. 00:5 () • ~~i~'H (). ~:H)4 0 .1.4B o. o.
19H!5 :;! • 00:3 (). ~)~5:1. 0.~~0'7 o. :1.48 o. o.
1986 2. oo:-s 0. :~3:l o.:31 0, :f.4B o. o.
.19B7 I 2. oo:3 o.:B1 o.~H~1 0.14B o. o.
1908. 2.003 o.:53:1. (). :3 .!.ll 0 .:1.4H o. o.
1989 2.003 (). :5~5:1. ().:52 0 .1. 4B o. o.
1990 f 2. oo::> 0.3:31 0. ~52:~ 0.14G o. o.
1991 2.003 o.~B:l (). ~~:?.6 0.148 o. o •.
,199~! 2. oo:3 (). :·:)3 :1. o.::~~.~9 0.1.48 o. o.
1993 2. oo:5 () • ::> :3 :1. (). =~~):3 0.1. 4B o. o.
1994 ;:.~. 00 ::; o.3::u () • :B6 0.14El o. o.
199!'5 2.00:{ o. ~1::n 0.33? 0. :lll8 o. o.
1996 :..2. 00~) (). 3:51 o.:H3 0.1.40 (). o.
1997 2. oo:-s 0.331 0.:346 0.148 o. o.
1998 ~~. oo:~ 0.~5:3:~ ,.·. 0. :~47' 0.1.48 o. o.
1999 2.003 o.33:L 0. ~3~52 o. :1.48 o. o.
200() r..!. oo3 0.331 0.357 0.1.4!:1 o. o.
.. ~-'.-""
Low Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMM01:;;4 EMMOF~::-i EMF'9F~4 EMP91:;;~5 ECONXR4 ECONXI:;;5
19El0 0.34B :1 •• :1. 2.363 1. 00(;' 0. ~.'i27 0.626
19~11. 0.40!:! 1..1. 2. 6l>4 :1. • 009 1..294 0. ~i24
19B2 0.408 1.1. 2. :'59 1..009 :L. 065 0.027 -
198:3 0.408 1 .• 1 2.67 1. 009 0.284 o.
1984 0.40B 1.1 2 • '7 :n 1 .• 009 0,099 0.
19l:l5 0. 40f3 1 .• :t 2.~W8 :1.'.009 o. o.
1986 0.408 :l.:l. 1.931 1. 009 o. o.
1987 0 ,li()B 1.:t :l. ~?.97 1 .• 009 o. o.
19i:l8 0.408 1. • 1. 1.229 1 + 00 1? o. o.
1989 0.40B 1. • :1. 1.229 :l. 009 o. o.
1990 0.40B 1..1. 1.229 1.009 o. o.
1991 0.40B 1 .• :1. :1..229 1..0()9 o. 0.
1992 0.40B :t.l. 1.229 1.. oo·:r o. o.
19'73 0,40B 1. 1. 1. 22(1 :1..009 o. o.
1994 0.40B 1.:t :1.. ~~29 1..009 o. o.
1995 0.408 1..1. 1 ?~)(~ + ......... I 1..009 o. o.
199!.> 0,40B :l • :1. :1..229 1 .• 009 o. o.
1997 (),4()8 1..1. 1.229 :l. 009 o. o.
1998 o.40B 1..1. 1 .• 229 1.. 009 o. o.
:1.999 0.408 1 .• :1. 1..229 :1,,0().9 o. o. t;j
2000 0.40B 1..1 :1..229 1. 007' o. o. I
1-'
0
ENPLJXfN EMTCJXF~4 EMS(.n<f~4 EMGFn4 EMGF'f~5 EMGSr-:4
19BO o. (). ~'i o. 1..486 :;,~ ~~ • :~ ~~.2 1.89
19B:l o. (). ~'i o. :1. ,AEl6 22.:{91 1. 9:38
19B2 o. () + ~::; o. 1.4B6 22 + 4~):1. 1.9B6
1903 o. (). ~'i o. :t. 486 22.~51:L 2.036
19!:14 o. () • ::-i o. 1 .• 48c·, ~~2. ~:'i71 2.087
198~'i o. 0. :::; o. 1..486 22. (.;32 2. 1.4
19Bf., o. (). ~5 (), 1 .• 486 22.691. 2.14
19f.l7 o. 0. ~:; o. :1..49 22.7~)1 2.14
:J. S'BB o. () • ~.'i (), 1.492 22.B:I.1 2.14
19f.l9 (), (),5 o. :L. 47'4 ;:~2. fl'l J. 2.14
1. 91,;>() o. 0 •. ~'.) o. 1 • ~:;~~6 22 t 9:~2 2.14
:L 99:L o. () . :::; (), 1..:B6 2~). ()() 1. 2.14
1992 o. () • !'5 o. 1. ::;:;6 2::;. ()7'1 2.14
1.(i<Y3 o. 0. ~) o. 1. ::'i3b 2~'.).1.41 .2.14
1994 o. (),5 o. 1. ~536 2~1.211 2.14
1995 o. (),5 o. 1. !5:1b ~.!3. 282 2.14
199t'> o. 0.5 o. l .• ::'i46 23. :~41 2.14
1997 o. 0.5 o. :L. ~)56 23.40:1. 2.14
1998 o. 0.5 o. 1.566 2:3.461 2.14
1999 o. 0 C" o. 1.576 23. 5;!1 2.14 . ,)
2000 o. () . :::; o. 1 • !:i86 ~~3. 582 2.14
., .... ·-~....,-···--
u 0 0 0 0
Low Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMGGI~~::;; EMGLF~4 EMGU~5
19f:l() 4. 7~'5 2.325 6.75
:l9B:I. 4.'799 2.384 6.819
1 7'f:l2 4.BII€l 2.444 6.8BB
:1.983 4.898 2. ~)06 6. <r~"'iB
19!34 4.948 2. !:)7 7. o;~9
1<?f35 1::" ~~. 2.635 7.1
l.9i3b "" ,,J. 2.661 7 .l.7l.
:L 90'7 5. 2.608 7.243
19Bf:l l::' ,,, . :~.7:1.5 7.:315
l?B9 ~:.) t ~!.742 7. ~5Bf:!
1.9'70 ~:.5 t 2.769 7.462
:L99l. !:·j. 2.797 7. !53"7 to
I 1 0<"'') !:) • :~. 825 7.61:~ ...... . , .,,. ...
l.993 ~). 2 t t=l!":i3 7.6sa ......
1994 c:· ~~ . 2. mJ~! 7. 71.,'5
J ('' (~ r::· . r , ""' !:; • 2. 911 7.843
:t 991, a::-~~ t 2. (14 7.921
19<17 ~5 t 2.91.,9 8+
199f:l 1!0' ~~ t 2.999 8.08
:1.999 ~-:j. 3.029 8.161
2000 "'" w• ~~. 059 8.243
Low Case Employment (103 persons)
Ei'ICN1R4 EMCN1H5 EMCMR4 EMCMR5 EMTAF~4 EMTAF~5
1980 1. • 6D~L1.4 :s. 8:1.442 0. ~~7·1244 1.94~:io1 0. 1!5El!:)96 5.12368
1981 1.1i'4f:l1~5 6.070:LB (). ~5867~~9 2.0141 o. :/.647~57 5. 6•1693
198::! 1. 9:'591.>9 ~). 9921.1 0.38076!3 1., 9B:l05 0+1620~~B 5.J.5/74
1.983 1.78646 6. :1.4256 0.386033 2.0101.9 o.16~~ni 5. 2•1823
:/.984 1. '78469 6.~H4f:l2 0. ~194799 2, O:'.HiB5 0.:1.65:6'2 5.50231
1.9[:15 1., 79~H3 6.46244 o. 40~.~<~::>n 2.1.01.:59 0.1.~)9704 5.63799
1 1186 :l,B41.B~! t>.7:1.44/' 0.4U.B!:i9 ~! .:L ~)40 1 0.:1.~)17 5.83048
19B7 :1..041'72 6.77007 (). 4:1.4;524 2.16f.l94 0. 1 ~1~)939 5.70024
1908 :1..80931 6.9:3B71. 0.41.9274 2. :1.9556 o.134~B4 ~).60J.28
1.989 1 .• 95?0B 7 .2Ml!:'i~~ 0. 43::!-1~)4 2.2696'? () .1.~".)5:~!92 5.98102
1.990 ~!.0:1.829 7, ~5:L 4~H 0. 44:~:W7 ~~. 32~i22 (). :1.~5602~3 6.24913
1.991 2.08497 7,!33704 (). 454~'if:l:l. 2 + 3 1?489 o.:L36ni8 6.59582
1992 2.:1.4771 Cl + :l ()~)~:)~~ 0. 46~~03~~ 2.44296 0 + 1 :~7::'i03 6.84066
1993 2. 2209tl B.4202D 0. •l /'~5El25 2. 504~')3 0. :L :-182~.)2 7.1.6031
1994 2. 29~!73 B, 7049;5 0, 4G39~)4 "'> r.:-, ... )1::0
t-'.. '""'J(J,:.."') o.13c;>oc, 7.50115
1995 2. :3,~) ~:54 9. 06::.~22 (),49~)7 2. 629'?6 0, 13 1PH09 /'.86509
1996 ~~.44047 9. 42!504 (). ~)0~:) 12;~ ... , I C'/.l. '')I:' .·:.. 0 \.j lit,~.;..) 0. 140:.)::! 8.13893
1997 2.~)1995 9.B0824 0. ~:il6614 2.7!:'i066 0.141242 8.•H3401
1998 ~!.6041.8 1.(),;!,269 0, !5269:H :~.B:L047 0.141.998 8.82428 t::d
I
1999 2.6G90B 10.6426 o.53B493 2.8777 0.142683 9.15606 f-'
2000 2.7Cl312 1.1. • 1. 02 o.;5:::i0146 2.94567 0.143453 9.55592 N
EMTOF~4 EMTOH~'i EMPUR4 EMF'LJF<5 E.MFIR4 EMFif~5
1980 0. 708 1?77 :1 .• 6~) :1. B 0. 3~-1-1269 0. 9:-12~113 0.394166 5.05557
1981 o. '7C>6::~6f:l 1. 7Hl67 (). ~~462'7' 0.9!B922 0.410762 5.42478
l.9F.l2 0.7~51.03 :1. • 69~32B 0.34El001 0. 96f:l:I.09 0.41:,;!43 5.311 ..
l.S>83 O. 74~'iB6:1. 1 .• ·nn:;~:; (). 34'?:1.f:l!:'i 0.99f:l626 0.41.2002 5.53107
1984 0 • '7 ;:'i ~~ B 0 ;:) :1 .• 7f:l24;! 0. ~~~)0~.>::;6 1.03:-:\B . 0. 4:1.C>2~"i9 5.78731
19[:;,5 () • 7 ::.~ !.'.'i 2 4 tl 1. B2Nl () + :~~'i3252 1.0641·<1 0.42041.8 6.01049
19B6 (). <'>07694 1..BD6:1.6 (). :3::!'/6::~4 1.1:1.633 0.4:Ul~:i:l2 6.39904
19Cl7 (). 60!:)!360 1. + 90()77 o .. 3~5o;:.c2 1.l2BOB 0.42741.5 6.48729
19D8 O.f.l0:1.:l~57 1..9441.6 o.:~c>2961 1 .• lt>319 0 + 4~5392)7 6.75266
19G9 0.61.:1.07~1 ::!.0292 0.369070 1. 2~)213 (),442406 7.28613
1990 0.61.9292 2. 092~3B 0. ~~746!'53 1. • 2B~Ll9 0. 4;50299 .. '1. 4-i789
1.991. (). 6270~j1 2. 1. 7!:'iOB 0. ~·5B0238 1.354b5 0.4581.44 8.02438
:t<i>92 0. 6:361.5:~ 2. 24~~1.)4 0. :~B!:)6B9 1. 41.294 0,465G2 8.28651
1993 0.645146 2, :~23H<? 0.39l::'i77 1.4819<? 0.4741.31 8.60166
1994 0. 6~:i4301 2. ~J9622 0.39751.9 1 .• 54496 0.482~i41 9.01179
19n) o. 66:H44 2.48675 0. 403~i~5!:'i 1. 6247~) 0.491104 9.54098
1996 0.671.877 2. 578~59 0. 40975:::; 1. 706!55 0.499922 10.2422
1997 0.6!30893 2.67488 0.416224 1.79383 0.509148 10.8349
1998 o. 69o:~~w 2. 77998 o.A228i:'lB 1.89()1.8 0.518.1>77 11.6559
1999 0.699356 2.8839B o. 429659 1.98682 0.528384 12.3278
2000 0.709339 2.99855 0.4:?6874 2.09473 0.538756 13.0734
( ' '--' u 0
3 Low Case Employment (10 persons)
EMDWr~4 EMDWF~~'i
1980 0.496608 7.~599El7
1981 0 + 57~~51.>5 8. 2~5944
1982 0. 56~5~5:'5 7.60835
19H3 0.5~5:1.062 7. "72~)2:~
19B4 0. !:'i:1:34<i>4 B. <Hi31. 7
19El~i o. ~12:=5::;o7 B • 23:3::?.6
1986 (). !~i24::i91 B. 4934;·5
19B7 (). ~)()~1966 B. 3~'i607
1908 (). !5:1.:3909 B. 2647:~
19B9 (). ~~)~~:l648 f.l,J;,'j()19
1990 (). 54?!:526 9.()<;'4:1.8
1<,)>91. o.t)64~t)7 9. ~5:~6
1.992 (). ~)01037 !j>. fJl\625
1993 o.:s<?991.'7 1. (). 249~~
1994 0.6:1.04?6 10. 6'7:1.3
1995 0. 6~572~)5 :t1 • 125~':)
1996 (). 6~)6!52~" :L:I. .4691
1997 o.6'7690B 11.8998
1998 0.6985()6 l~!.:Hn5
1999 0.720181 1.2.7~138
2000 0.7442()6 13.2215
0 0
EMDFm4 EMDRF~~j Et-1891~4 EMS9R5
=~.f.l8718 14.7084 3.90864 16.691
~~. 0744 1~3. 6167 4.67668 17.989
3.10274 1 ::-i. ::>7~~n 4.64928 17.5863
:3. 08::J::i~:'i 1~). 9215 4. :lf.>4tl0 18.3362
3.1~~729 1.6. 5:'.502 4.14702 19. 2~E
3.1B~i1.7 17. o<r6c> 4.1.7:ll~) 20.0236
3, 2~1~57B Hl. 02:3:~ 4.3:1.203 21.4()48
3.2662El 1!3. 240!5 4, ~H :l.!:'i9 21.7191
~~. :342!'5 :W. BB07 4. 4502~, 22.6664
:3.44~534 20. 1. :L !j>5 4.6491.9 24.578
~~. ~5~~b:·:w 21. 060f:l 4. fJ3()~';)2 26.0453
·3.6~~067 22. :5077 5.029::~1 28.027
~5. 72374 2~~.3615 5.2:1.782 29.7212 0:.1 3 .-s::!.:54:~ 24.6:1.12 !'5, 4:39B4 31.764 I
3. 92?~~'7 2::'i. 7~571 5. 6~'i9 33.0953 f-' w
4.03598 27 .2on; ~). 08268 35.5268
4.14691 2(1. 70::-i4 6.11557 38.0693
4~264()5 30.3069 6. :~6408 40.795
4.38621 32.0B07 6.62954 43.7977
4.!:HHl7 33.sc,'77. 6.El9929 .46. 885
4.64748 35.8699 7.20052 50.3008
Low Case Population (10 3 persons)
1980
1981
19B2
19B3
-1904
1985
198!.)
1987
198El
19G?
1990
1.99:1.
1'192
1 cn;:1
1.994
1995
1.996
1997
199B
19'19
2000
1.980
1901.
19f.l2
1.9B3
1.9B4
190~)
1986
:J.9B7
19B8
:1.989
1.990
19<i>:l
1. en:~
1993
. 1994
199!5
1996
1.997
199B
1999
2000
CNNP21:::r4
42.G752
46.1.~>.44
46.2BJ.B
46. :1.947
46, :1.:;~~54
46.0:301
4~i. 02c')~5
4~'i. 7 401:l
46. f:J~5:3<i>
47. n::~76
4El.G:I.49
49.7096
!50, 7 :L~B
~)1.6914
52.6"72
:;; ~~ • f.> T/7
~54. n:H
~:j !7i • B ::~ 6
56.9271
~.)0.119
.PDPI:::4
!51. ~'i9
5:5. n;:3:3
:::;::'i.e:~ :1.6 .
~'i4. 4737
::;:3. oon:;
~'; ::'i • () 7E1 •1
~'i ::) • :1. 4 ~5 :3
!:54. :~0/'2
!5!5. :1. 90!'.'i
~'i6. 4~'i~)9
~)7 • c!l~~~"i:1
!5B, "7'1 Hl
59.069:3
6 :1. • 0 !'.'i 9::-i
62. :~~.!71:1
63.4024
64.606
65.€!635
67 .lt)2
6B.4731
69.8791
CNNP2F~5
1.6~i. 272
1.n>.OBB
1·7o. no~:;
1. 7~.'i. ~.'i~.'i
18J.62:::;
:L f:l6 •. 9
1.94.651
:1.96.9133
20:1..9'11
212.69:1.
220.409
230, I'D
Z~f:l. 92:1.
24H.606
2::16, BB~~
26tl.lf:l
279, ~'i7B
::.! 9 :1 .• 6 6 ::.!
~:104. 958
~~Hl.l02
POPF~~'i
:1. B~'i, 007
1.'12.862
:L 9 0 , :·5 0 !':i
1. 9!'5. 009
::~o:~..::1:1.4
2oc). 74
214.647
2:1.7.1:37
222.~~07
23~~. :L 7:1.
241.();.)7
2~H, ~599
:.;!::'i9. 91.6
2c)9. 77B
:uo. 2~1"7
2B9.719
301.307
3:1.~5 • ~)B3
327.077
:~40. 422
355.198
POF'Mf~4
o.B36244
0. fl36:: .. ~44
(),B36244
(). 8:56~!·14
0,0:36:?.44
o. B:3c)244
(). !3:'36244
o. n:1t.)24•1
().8:36244
(). f.J:56244
o, n:3C>::~44
o. o:362·H
o. o:·562•H
0 • B:-l6:~~44
0, B~-->6;;)44
o. a:562A4
0. B3c.i:~44
0. B:-l6244
0, B::~6244
(). K~6244
0.836244
F'OF'MR5 F'OPNE4 F'OF'NE5
1.2.0!:117 7.351:::ib 7. 027,')3
12.001.7 7.49f:J!:i9 7.:L68:LB
1.2.0B:L7 7. 64f:l~~!'.) 7.:~11.!:"i4
12.0Bl7 7.BO:I.~:i2 7. 45777
12.0B17 '7,9~)755 7.60692
12.0B:I.7 8.11.669 7.75905
1.2 • OD1.'7 B.27902 7.91 1123
12.0f:!:l.7 f:l. 4'l46 8 .. 0'72~)1
12. OEll 7. B.61.:·549 s.2~n95
:L2.0Bl7 0. 7B:::i75 8 .~W863
1.2.00:1.7 B.96146 8.~)666
1.2.08:L'7 9.:1.40613 8. /'3'?'i'2
12.0817 9. :~2:549 8.'?1268
12.0!31.7 9. ~'i0996 9.09093
12.0!317. 9.70015 9.2'7274
1.2.001.'7 9.8'141~5 9.45HJ9
12.on1.7 10.092 9.64735
1.2.081.7 10.2939 9.84029
12.0817 10.4997 10.0371
12.0817 10.709"7 10.2378 t:d
I
12.0817 10.9239 10.4426 f-'
~
u (_) 0 , .. 0 0 0 0 0 (.)
-Intermediate Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMA9AR4 EMA9AR5 EMA9BR4 EMA9BR5 EMA9CF~4 EMA9CR5
1980 0.089 o:. o. o. 4·231 o.
1981 (). ()!;'1 o. o. o. 2.263 o.
1982 0.093 o. o. o. :~. 3 o.
1983 0.096 o. o. o. 2. ~1·42 o.
1984 0, C·98 o. o. o. 2.392 o.
1985 0.1 o. o. o. 2.449 o.
1986 0. :1. :1. o. o. o. 2.::i1.fl o.
19fJ'i' ~, •• 1") IJ+J.< .. o. o. o. 2. ~)9 3 o.
17'B8 0.13 o. o. o. 2.682 o.
19i39 0.14 o. (), (), 2. 7B~5 o.
1990 ()' :1.5 () t o. o. 2.905 o.
1.991. 0 .1. ::'i!'5 o. o. o. 3.0•14 o.
1.992 (). :L 6 o. o. o. 3. 20~) o.
1993 0.:1.65 o. o. o. ~5. :~192 o.
1994 (j • j,'/ o. o. o. ~~.60!3 o.
1995 0.175 o. o. o. 3, B~'i9 o.
1996 0. Hl o. o. o. 4.:1.49 o.
1997 0. Hl~5 o. o. o. 4.4S6 (),
199tl (). l. !jl o. o. o. 4.B77 o.
1999 0.195 o. o. o. ~5.:329 o. td
I
2000 0.2 o. (), o. 5, B~i:3 o. ,_.
Vl
EMMFR4 _ EMMFI:~5 T£MMLF~4 EMMU~5 EMMF'F\4 'EMMPR5
1980 2',.154 o. ~5n'i 0. ~~3 0.148 o. o.
1981 2.18 0.384 0.36 0.1.48 o. o.
1982 2. 20fl (). ~)!?4 (\ ... <' " • ,:"> r 0.:1.48 o. '0.
1983 2.24 0.40:3 (). ·~2 0. 140 o. o.
1984 2.273 0.4:1.~5 (). 4~) 0.14B .0. o.
19B5 2. :3:1.1 0.424 0.4B 0. 1. 48 o. o.
1981.> 2. :~~53 0. 4:~4 0. !','i:l. 0.1.4£-! o. o.
1Y87 2.4 0.445 o.~i4 0 .1.48 o. o.
.19C18 . '2. 4-52 0 .4~)1.> () • ;57 . 0.:1:4€! o. o.
1989 2. ~5 :1. 0.4Ml 0.6 0.:1.48 o. (),
1990 2.577 (),479 0.63 o.:IAf.l o. o.
1991 2 .• (,,~; 0.49:1. 0.66 0.14B o. 0.
1992 2.'733 0. ~)04 () .1.>9 () • :1.4 !:l o. o.
199:1 2.828 (). :::; :1.6 (),72 0.14!3 o. o.
1994 2.936 0. ~)29 o.n'i 0.140 o. o.
1995 3. O!':i7 o.~.'i42 0.7El o. 148 o. o.
1996 ;3 .197 0. !:i56 o.c1 0.:1.40 . o. o.
199'7 3 .. , .... ~ • ,:>,')I 0.5'7 o.B4 0. :1.4!:1 o. o.
199S ~5. 5:38 0. ::iB4 O.B7 0.1.4B o. o.
1999 ~5.746 () • ~:; <1'~7 0.9 0.1.4€! o. o.
20{)() •3. 7'0~) O.f.d4 0.925 0 .1.48 o. o.
Intermediate Case Employment (10 3 Eersons)
EMMOf~4 EMMDH~i EMP9F<4 EMF''IR!'.:i ECONXR4 ECONXF:5
1.980 0.348 :1. • :1. 2.:~r.,:~ 1.009 :1..609 0.229
1 S.'!=l:l. (). 401:J 1.1. 2. f.>f>4 1 .• ()() 9 ~~.C09 0. 6':.'6
19G2 0, B:l. 9 1..1. '') r.:·Q ,. .... ..J t 1.009 1.71.4 0.524
l. 'I El~3 (). f:l:l. 9 1.1. 2.7 1.009 1. • O:':i3 0. 027
19H4 (). f:l :1.9 :t • 1. 2.761 1.. OO't o. 70:1. o.
1.90~~ 0.879 1 .• .1. 2.44B 1..009 0. 80'? o.
1986 0.079 1. • :1. 1.991. :L.009 0. 6 '/'~) o.
1.9137 0.879 1..1 :l • ~'.)~57 1 .• 009 0.4:1.!'5 o.
19GH ()I· 8'7't :l • 1. :1 .• ~3!:'i7 1 .• 009 0 "'''"''') • ""} .... J ,. ... o.
1.989 o.H79 1..:1. 1.. ~~!::i7 1.. 00'1 0.442 o.
H-90 o.l:i79 1..:1. 1.. ~1!:'i7 1.009 0. ~~~'i9 o.
1.991. 0.8'?9 1 .• :1. 1 .• ::·;::'i7 :l .• 009 (). 26!5 o.
1. 99~~ O.B79 1. 1 1.. 3~)7 :l.. 009 (). ;!49 o.
199:~ o.B79 1. 1. 1 • :3~57 1 .• 009 ().249 o.
1. 994 ()~f:l'79 :1 .• :1. 1. • ~5::i'l 1.009 0.032 o.
199!:'i O.f:l/'9 :l.:l. 1.. 35'7 1.009 o. o:~2 o.
1996 O.H79 :1 .• 1 1 .• ~1~)7 1.009 0. 0~12 o.
1.997 0.1379 1..1. 1. :~!)/' 1..009 0.03::! o. t:P
199B 0.879 1 .• 1. 1.. 3::'i7 1.009 0.032 o. I
1999 0.879 1 .• :l :1 .• 35'7 1.009 o. o:~2 o. f-'
0\
2000 0.079 :L.1. :l • :~~'i7 1.009 o. o:~2 o.
EMPUX1~4 EMTOXH4 EMS9XF\4 EMGF!~4 EMGF!~S EMGSR4
1980 o. 0.5 0.05 1 .• 4f~6 22. 3:{2 1..89
19B:l o. 0. ~) (). 09 1 .• 4i=l6 22.:'591 1.982
19B2 o. (). ::) (). :1.2 1.41:!6 22.4~):1. ::~.131
1 ')'8:3 o. 0.5 (). 12 1.. 486 ~!::~. ~.) 1. :1. 2.292
190•1 0.09 () • !':i 0.06 1. 4l~6 22. ~:;n 2.464
1 'i'f:l~) ().O~J () • ~:i o. o::~ :1 .• 406 22. 6~:12 2.65
1.9B6 (),09 () .. ::; o. o:-> :L. 4~;!6 :~~.!. 69 :l 2.811
1.9B7 ().09 0 a::· t ,,I 0.03 :l.506 22 t 7~) 1. 2.982
l. 9BEJ 0.09 0. ~) o. o:3 :1. • !5 :1. iS 22. B:I.:L 3.1.64
1.989 0.09 () • ~5 ().03 1. :7i~~6 .22.El'l1 3.357
1990 0.09 (). ~5 o.o3 1.5M> 22 • '7~~2 3.561
1991 0.09 0. ~5 o. o:? 1.5~% 23.001. 3.61.3
1.992 f 0.09 0 "" • ,,J (). ()3 1.. !5:·:~,1) 2:1.071. 3.666
199~~ 0.09 0.5 0.03 1.536 2~>.:1.41. 3.72 . 19'74 ().09 0.5 0.03 1. ~)36 2:3. ;u.:J. 3.775
:1.99~) 0.09 (). ti (). 0~5 1. 5:36 23. ::!a~~ 3.83
19~~~) ().()9 i),5 o.(>:~ 1.546 23 • :H1. ·· 3.886
1997 0.09 0 a::• • ,,J o. o:~ :L. ~)!'."i6 23.401 3.943
199F.l o.o9 0 t:• . ~~ 0.03 1.566 ;!~~. 461 4.
1999 o.o9 0.5 0.()3 1.576 23. 5:!1 4.059
2000 0.09 0 ,,. •• J 0.03 1.576 23.582 4.118
... --·····
··--··-···--
0 0 c 0 0 0
Intermediate Case Employment (10 3 persons)
E11G~·m5 EMGLR4 EMGLI~5
1.9BO 4. 7~.'i 2. 3::~!:1 t,-,.75
19f.ll 4.799 2. 4:1.6 6.!385
19B2 4.i:l48 2.506 7 .02::>
19E!3 4.898 2 •. 60:1. 7.163
1.904 4.949 2.69f:l 7.:30b
1. 9B::i 5. 2.B 7 .4~)2
:L9B6 :':i. 07 6 2.905 7.602
1987 ~:it 1. !:52 ~~.014 7.754
19GB ~) . ::~~~ ~.,. :1.27 7.909
1.'?8<,:l ~.'i. ~509 a. 24::) El.067
:t S.l90 ~'i. :50'1 :).:'5,S7 El.:~.:;~B
:1.99:1. :':i. 46fJ :3.4'?:5 8. :~93
1.992 ~s. ~:54 a :1. 62::i 8.561 t::d
1. 99~, 5.629 :,.76:1. E!. 7:j2 I
I-'
:1.994 ~). 7 :l:l 3.902 8.906 -...!
1995 ~:i. 79~) 4.049 9.0f.l5
l9<Nl ~3, 8B 4. 20:t 9. ~?.6 7
1997 :s. 966 4. :5:=:i9 ;9.452
199B c1. 05:5 4.523 9.641.
:1.999 6. 14.:;~ 4.693 9.834
2000 c1. 232, 4;869 10.031
Intermediate Case Employment (10 3 persons)
EMCN11H EMGN1 P!5 .EMCMJH EMCMJ:;:~) EMTAR4 EMTAR5
1980 1. <;1:1.1.~)7 ~).~50613 0. 36:5053 1. Bf:l~H-4 0.156805 4.41059
1901 2.40723 c'. :L :~40'7 o. ~~s~:uo2 2. 04?:l <;> 0.1b5111 5.68765
1982 ~!. 39662 6.44251 0.403691 2 .1 08~5'7 0,164369 6.00606
1983 ~~. ~~27~)2 6. 296,2~) 0. 3%~)68 2.06B69 0.164824 5.59!:.i07
1984 ,., '1'')1!!'1!:"
.: ..•• • .. ,:... '\4}\J 6.45473 0.404874 2.:l149B 0.1661/'3 5.82367
19B!'5 ::!. 3::'i98 6.66 0.41.53:34 2 .:l7~';)4'7 0.161516 6.04445
1986 2. 42:5B5 6.87569 0.423271 2.2Hl01 0.15~H71 6.1039
1.987 2.A1928 6.91:14:1.5 0.429057 2 t 2~)0!:)5 o.137e4 6. 070~1
1988 2.60:571. 7.28379 0. 4402•11 2.3:L36!5 0.13f.l552 6.28608
1989 :~.74022 7.6693 0.4!'57:l11 2.4092'7 O, Ll9~"i25 6.83102
1rno 2.87488 7.9'7f.ll.l9 0.4700B7 2.48:518 0.1401.99 7.21004
1991 2. 99f:l:'58 8. :~~)59 0. 4F.J:B~S4 2. ~)!:5 1?07 0.140929 7.6165
1992 ~~. 14!:106 0.70008 0. 49~)626 2. 629~5:3 0 .1416:~6 8.00064
1993 ~5, 324:B 8. 9n51:11 (). ~)104~)8 2.7:l!50~3 0.142404 8,4B446
1994 3. 4:'1~.!;!4 9. 3:54:'56 0. ~)24001. 2 • 79~H6 () .14~5093 8.96621
l.99:::i 3.62B71 9.70094 (). ~.)40427 2.1J9013 0 .14~386 9.54183
1996 ~5. Blf3f:!9 3.0.241.8 (). !':)!::i509 2. 974::'i8 0.144~)9 10.0299
1997 4.()i:J():l8 10.?4:1.1 0.572499 3.07666 0. 1'1~:i~~32 10.6392
1998 4.34059 :l :1 •• 280 0.50927 3.17543 0.146105 11.2741 0;1
1999 4. 6~:!~~2:'3 11.848:~ 0.6081.17 3.2B692 0.146811 11.9419 I ,_.
2000 4.9385b 1;?..46::19 0. c,;?.705~~ 3.39945 0.147599 12.7043 00
EMTOF<4 EMTOF'\:i EMPUF~4 EMPUR5 EMFII~4 EMFIR5
1980 (). 7206~)3 1..570BB 0.~~42474 0, 870El61 0.405483 4.62412
19B1 0. 80f.>827 :1. • 7:~~'i:B 0.364262 0.996099 0. 4:3!')7;:)5 5.~1836
1982 O.BO:I.824 1.B1.562 0. 37~59B8 1.. 06\)0:3 o .4:;;u. 71 5.98018
19El:~ ()!790BB1 1 • Ti"'i"5 9 (),3760f:!2 1.0:5 0. 4~5;!.:~03 5.75948
19tl4 o.79BJ.9:l 1.0Hl79 0. ;:~02:~4::1 1 t 06~~!~i~; 0.461:L07 5.99872
.l9B5 0.7(]2964 1. Bno:; (). 392~)6EJ 1.1.0~'j()j, 0, 47S!:i32 6.31426
1986 ·(),741.024 1. 9:UBB 0.401.2El2 1 .• 14S'9!3 0. 4f:l7El76 6.65255
.1987 0 .6~:i57'7b 1.. ni~5D9 0. 406b~:i7 1.1.7273 (),495514 6.82522
1.98Cl (),671002 2.03312 (). •12007~:; 1. 2::>c,o4 0.~)14649 7.31.12
1. 9~l9 0.604492 2. 1:~21.3 0.43::i:l76 1.:3:tD46 0. ~)3~)436 7. 71322
. 1990 0 .1.)9!'.)99,-!> 2.:~:1.B 0, 44T70El 1 • 3tl5:36 0.5~)161 8. o2:=:;77
.1991. 0. 7070~5 2.3075 0.•156602 1.467B2 (). !'.'i67261 8.69618
1992 . (). 7 .1. 90::?:3 2. =:19499 0.46B:H4 1. !543B!3 o.5B42El2 9.061.61
1. 99:~ o. 7:'520'76 2.46994 0.4B:L2B;-~ 1 .• 6()9(:!4 0. 60:Q13 9.33127
:1994 0.742441 2. r:55!:)~; :t 0. 49:?.fl77 :t. 68603 0.62021 9.83
1995 (). '75672~!. 2.66002 (). !'.'i()/()94 1. • 7B758 (),641143 10.4945
:1.996 o. 771.:~76 2. 7tl3b9 (). ~"i22.29 :1. 1.1393(,2 0. 66:~629 11.3642
1997 o.?El67~".)2 :~. 908~58 (). ~)38!:'i73 2.00987 0.6871:14 12.1433
1998 (). 802982 3.044B3 0.555921. 2.13875 0.71~5773 13.1972
1999 o.a:l934~! 3. ltl388 0.574429 2.27242 0.741589 14.1141
2000 o.o~:;7io1 3. 33611 0. t'i94239 2 .4211.f3 0.771527 15.1326
u u ( .
'-/ u
3 Intermediate Case Employment (10 persons)
EMDWR4 EMDWR5
1980 0.549721 6.70129
1981 0.685687 8.33388
1982 0.681726 a.719J
1983 0.641153 8.16996
1984 0.643181 8.4586
1985 0.667603 8.7567
1986 0.669673 8.8558
1987 0.648155 e;a4006
1988 0.694249 9.13082
1989 0.728874 9.81195
1990 0.762688 10.2891
1991 0.793823 10.797
1992 0.830602 11.2741
1993 0.87542 11.871
1994 0.902674 12.4556
1995 0.951671 13.1561
1996 1.00517 13.7504
1997 1.06381 14.4869
1998 1·12835 15.2444
1999 1.19818 16.0461
2000 1·27604 16.9434
EMDRR4
3.01441
3.36386
3.55881
3.56039
3.66648
3.84266
3.99564
4.09132
4.33443
4.57776
4.81745
5.02722
5.2588
5.52057
s.75929
6.058
6.38462
6.74285
7.1339
7~56171
8.03165
0 0 u
EMDRR5 EMS9R4 EMS9R5
13.6678 4.67037 15.1828
15.8384 6.24736 18.3195
16.9502 6.27061 19.9496
16.4604 5.71433 19.1431
17.0459 5.57551 19.9821
17.8042 5.92742 21.103
18.6085 6.12582 22.3089
19.0269 6.11139 22.9259
20.1562 6.68997 24.6681 ~
21.6278 7.12469 26.9894 I
~
22.8324 7.55883 28.9162 ~
24.3194 7.96138 31.3418
25.6992 8.44488 33.6275
26.9033 9.04343 34.516
28.2964 9.4075 36.0994
30.1554 10.0778 39.0765
32.1052 10.8222 42.2388
34.252 11.6515 45.7205
36.6425 12.5794 49.5879
39.1341 13.602 53.6776
41.9196 14.7612 58.2225
3 Intermediate Case Population (10 persons)
:J.9BO
1981
. 1982
19fl~~
1. 984
1. 90~)
1. 9El6
1987
1988
:J.9B9
1990
199:1.
199~~
199:1
1994
199~5
1996
1997
1998
1999
=~ooo
1980
1981
1.982
1 1rB:1
19[14
19El5
1986
19B?
19B8
1989
1.990
1991
1992
19 113
1994
19n"i
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
CNNP2fUl
44.9433
50.5342
52.;~:3:36
~7!1. 9948
~'i~'S. ()~592
54.914
5~). 949::5
~"5~5. 9E!7 6
~"i9.21B9
62 .1.~5~1
6~'i.O:L9?
67.409
70.2628
n: • 4 ::w :1.
'76. 07:.~B
79. 659'7
83 • 5E!O~'l
87.9052
92.6!:i:l.2·
<n. B53?
1 0~'1. ,o!J()8
F'OPF~4
54.7401
61.. f.,7EJ
f.>2. 4~524
. t.,1. 6B~.'i6
62 • t5~H
64.1.>759
65.7:397
1 6::) • f>B~'l5 .
<!>9. ::.~206
72.1969
l 75.1764
77.7:309
BO. 671~3
84. Ot53:3
13t.,.t.)412
90.4::!21
9•t. 5405
9 1t. 0673
104.019
109.432
115•4
1.6:5. 229
1.74.B~~9
183.:1.26
n9. 703
:1. n~:i. 2~'.)6
1.92.:1.:1.
1.9f:l.093
~~03 .1 ~!."7
~~12.7:ll
22~). 2B
2~':)!:-j. 3'71.
24?. ·ne
2~:)8. a94
2t.>7.:u,5
277.04:1.
292. 62~~
:~0"7. 034
:~24. 44
~542.D1.~'i
~561. 606
302. ~'ill.
POPRt'i
1!34.965
194.'7:1.!)
20:"5. 044
:1.99.27
204.944
2:l :1.. 9::'i:l.
2:1.f.l.8B9
2:~~'1. ()~~~~
~~4!:).76
2~.)6. () :1.9
2~if:l. t'i:37
279.BBG
2UB. ~:'i:57
299.:1.95
:H4 .1.6,3
~529. ~56:~
~'14(,. 362
:-)64.934
:~El4. OO~'i
405. o:1s
F'OF'MI--::4
0 .fJ36244
O.K'l6244
0. 0:36244
(). f:l3~',244
0.836244
O, !B6244
0. fB6244
0 .!B6244
0. !3:"56244
O.DU>244
0. B:3~'>244
o.o3b244
0.!:!36244
o.B36244
0. B~~6244
0. B~3f.>244
0. !3:36244
0.!336244
(). 8::~6244
0 • .f:l3b244
0.836244
F'OF'HF~5 POPNE4 F'OPNE5
12.08:1.7 7.3t'i156 7.02763
:L2.08:l7 7.4S'B59 7.16B18
1.2.0017 7. 640~55 7.3J.J.54
12.0B17 7.80152 7.45777
12.0El17 7. 957t'i~7i 7.60692
:t:~.OD:t7 B .1.:1. 669 7. 7~:i905
12.08:1.7 8.27902 7.91.423
12. OB 1. 7 B. 444t> 8 .0/'251
:L2.0B:l.7 8.6U49 8.23395
:1.2.0!317 n. 7D!:)75 8.39C63
12.0!317 s.116:t4c> 8. !5666
l.2.0B1'7 9.1.4060 8.731'92
1.2.0tH7 9. 32:349 8.91268
1.:?.. ()0 17 9. !:i0996 9.09093
12.0B:I.7 cy.?001.5 9.27274
12.0817 1r.B9415 9. 4~iB 1. 9
1;~.081.7 10.092 9 • t.)4735
12.0817 10.2939 9.84029
1.2.0817 10.4~J97 10.0~':171
12.0817 :1.0. 7097 10.2378 l:d
12.0817 10.9239 10.4426 I
N
0
I !0
C)
J
,)
1.
R-1
References
Kresge, David, and Thomas, Monica. "Estimated Gross State Product
. for Alaska," Alaska Review of Business and Economic Conditions,
11(1), April 1974.
2. Thomas, Monica and Goodwin, Earlene. "Estimates of Alaska Gross
Product, 1965-1973," Alaska Review of Business and Economic
Conditions, 12(1), March 1975.
3.
4.
Dolezal, Patricia L. and Ender, Richard L. 1976 Population Profile,
Municipality of Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska: Anchorage Urban
Observatory Program, University of Alaska-Anchorage, September
1976.
Hitchins, Diddy R. et al. A Profile of Five Kenai Peninsula Towns:
An Analysis of the Demographic Characteristics and Attitudes
Toward Services and Community Development in Kenai, Soldotna,
Seward, Seldovia, and Horner, Anchorage, Alaska: Bureau of
Management and Urban Affairs and Anchorage Urban Observatory,
University of Alaska-Anchorage, 1977.
Government Documents
State of Alaska, Department of Fish and Game, Division of Commercial
Fisheries. "Alaska Catch and Production: Commercial Fisheries
Statistics," Statistical Leaflet Nos. 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21,
23, 25, .26, 27, 28. Juneau, Alaska: Alaska Department of Fish
and Game, Various Issues.
State of Alaska, Department of Labor, Employment Security Division,
Research and Analysis Section. Alaska Labor Force Estimates by
Industry and Area. Various Issues.
State of Alaska Current Population Estimates by Census
Division. Various Issues.
State of Alaska Current Population Estimates by Labor Market
Area, July 1, 1971. Juneau, Alaska: Alaska Department of Labor, n.d.
State of Alaska, Department of Natural Resources, Division of Oil and
Gas. Statistical Report for the Year 1975.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Alaska Crop and Livestock Reporting
Service. Alaska Agricultural Statistics. Palmer, Alaska: Alaska
Crop and Livestock Reporting Service. Various Issues.
R-2
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 1970 Census of
Population: PC(l)-B3, General Population Characteristics, Alaska.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Survey of
Current Business, 56(1), parts 1 and 2, January 1976.
Survey of Current Business, 57(7), July 1977.