Columbus: Economy
Columbus: Economy
Major Industries and Commercial Activity
Columbus's diversified economy is balanced among the services, trade, government, and manufacturing sectors. State government, education, banking, research, insurance, and data processing in particular have helped the city to resist recession. Telecommunications, retailing, health care, and the military are other strong employment areas. Home to more than 70 insurance companies, Columbus ranks among the insurance capitals of the United States. The city is the corporate headquarters for nationwide firms such as Nationwide Insurance Enterprise, Banc One Corporation, The Limited, Inc., American Electric Power, Wendy's International, Huntington Bancshares, Inc., Consolidated Stores Corporation, Borden Inc., Ashland Chemical, Battelle Memorial Institute, and Bob Evans Foods Inc. Twenty of Columbus's largest financial institutions operate more than 400 offices throughout the metropolitan region.
The U.S. government is the city's third largest employer; it operates the Defense Supply Center, whose 3,000 employees operate a massive central storehouse that ships up to 10,000 items a day to military posts around the world. Manufacturing comprises about 10 percent of the metropolitan Columbus economic base; the main production categories being machinery, fabricated metal, printing and publishing, and food processing. Local industry profits from proximity to coal and natural gas resources. Limestone and sandstone quarries operate in the area.
Items and goods produced: airplanes, auto parts, appliances, telephone components, computer equipment, glass, coated fabrics, shoes, food products
Incentive Programs—New and Existing Companies
Several city and state programs are available to assist existing companies and proposed startups in the Columbus metro area.
Local programs
The Columbus Development Department incentive programs focus on small business lending and inner-city revitalization, including the Office of Business Assistance and Office of Financial Assistance to help create and sustain jobs and companies; among their specialties are infrastructure assistance and urban brownfields redevelopment. The Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce oversees very successful public and private partnerships and small business programs to ensure the success of the region's businesses. Training programs are available through the Small Business Administration and the Central Ohio Industrial Training Program.
State programs
State of Ohio incentive programs include loans, loan guarantees, and industrial revenue bonds.
Job training programs
Ohio's Adult Vocational Education Full-Service Centers offer customized training programs designed to meet the needs of a specific business, as well as other ongoing skill training for current or new employees.
Development Projects
Columbus is one of the nation's fastest-growing cities. The city's focus is on downtown development; in 2001 the city commenced a Strategic Business Plan to revitalize downtown Columbus and bring jobs and investment to the city center. The city sought input from businesses and from the community with a "Tell Us Your Great Idea" campaign, and the Columbus Downtown Development Corporation was formed to bring the ideas to fruition. Public and private entities invested $1.72 billion in the downtown area between 2001 and 2004.
In 2000 the new $150 million, 800,000 square foot Nationwide Arena opened and is home to the NHL's Columbus Blue Jackets. In 2001 the Greater Columbus Convention Center celebrated the completion of an $85 million expansion and renovation, which increased the center's size from 1.4 million to 1.7 million square feet. The renovations include an additional 120,000 square feet of exhibit space, a 15,000 square foot ballroom, and 11 new meeting rooms (for a total of 426,000 square feet of exhibit space, 2 ballrooms, and 61 meeting rooms). An additional 1,100 parking spaces and new shops and restaurants round out the improvements.
Economic Development Information: Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce, telephone (614)221-1321
Commercial Shipping
Strategically located between the Northeast and Midwest regions and served by an excellent transportation system, Columbus is a marketing, distribution, and warehouse center. An important link in the import/export shipping network is Rickenbacker Air/Industrial Park, which has been designated a free trade zone. Twenty-one passenger and freight air carriers serve Port Columbus International Airport, two passenger carriers and a number of freight carriers fly out of Rickenbacker, and Bolton Field provides runway space and amenities for charter air services. Three major railroads operate routes through Columbus; all provide piggyback and rail car shipping and two have export-import containerization facilities. Completing the ground transportation system are more than 100 motor freight companies. One of three inland ports in the United States, Columbus receives and ships U.S. Customs-sealed containers to the Pacific Rim.
Labor Force and Employment Outlook
Among Ohio's 10 largest cities, Columbus is the only one whose population increased in the 1990s, and this trend continues in the 2000s. Eighty-three percent of the population over age 25 are high school graduates and 29 percent have college degrees; 71 percent of the population over the age of 16 is in the labor force. While the region has a more desirable workforce than most of the nation, the increase in average age is causing some concern. The Chamber of Commerce has launched several projects to give businesses the tools to compete in such a market.
Traditional economic mainstays such as government, the Ohio State University, corporate headquarters, and large financial institutions continue to lend stability to the local economy. The Columbus area has lost manufacturing jobs in the last decade but has added positions in services to create a net gain in jobs overall.
The following is a summary of data regarding the Columbus metropolitan area labor force, 2004 annual averages.
Size of non-agricultural labor force: 922,616
Number of workers employed in . . .
construction and mining: 40,900
manufacturing: 82,000
trade, transportation, and utilities: 183,900
information: 19,700
financial activities: 74,500
professional and business services: 132,800
educational and health services: 100,700
leisure, hospitality, and other services: 125,400
government: 153,400
Average hourly earnings of production workers employed in manufacturing: $18.80
Unemployment rate: 6.3% (February 2005)
| Largest employers |
Number of employees |
| State of Ohio |
28,015 |
| The Ohio State University |
22,100 |
| The United States Federal Government |
17,000 |
| Banc One Corporation |
15,500 |
| Limited Brands |
15,250 |
| Ohio Health |
15,000 |
| Nationwide Insurance |
12,520 |
Cost of Living
The following is a summary of data regarding several key cost of living factors in the Columbus area.
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Average House Price: $257,430
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Cost of Living Index: 101.7 (U.S. average = 100.0)
State income tax rate: Ranges from 0.743% to 7.5%
State sales tax rate: 5.0% (food and prescription drugs are exempt)
Local income tax rate: 2%
Local sales tax rate: 6.75% (total)
Property tax rate: Taxes on real property are assessed on 35 percent of the property's total market value. Businesses with personal property valued at $10,001 or more must also pay personal property tax in the state of Ohio.
Economic Information: Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce, telephone (614)221-1321
Cite this article
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Cromwell's trailblazer? Reinterpreting the Earl of Essex. (Robert Devereux)
Magazine article from: History Today; 4/1/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex. It was S.R...of the efforts of Essex. The logistical...not surprising that Essex found it difficult...look like an Oliver Cromwell, but when placed...flagrante with Sir Thomas Uvedale. When she...
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Oliver Cromwell and All the King's Men
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 7/3/1988; ; 700+ words
; ...country squire, Oliver Cromwell. However, Kenyon...brooding, incompetent Earl of Essex, the flamboyant Rupert, the enthusiastic Cromwell, among others, and gives Cromwell's commander, the phlegmatic Sir Thomas Fairfax, higher marks...
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BIOGRAPHY THOMAS CROMWELL HAD MANY GIFTS; MAKING ENEMIES WAS ONE, THINKS DIARMAID MACCULLOCH
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 3/4/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...428 4115 Poor Thomas Cromwell. He has rarely...tombs. Then Cromwell decided that he must become an Earl, and Henry granted...the title of Essex, one of the...delight in making Cromwell's arrest at...John Fisher or Thomas More? If you...
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`Henry VIII: The King and His Court,' by Alison Weir; Ballantine.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 8/22/2001; ; 521 words
; ...descriptive about court life, delving into the rise and fall of various political factions led by the Earl of Essex, Thomas Cromwell, and by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey. Each time Henry takes a new wife, Weir illustrates the shift in court politics. Between...
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Cromwell's Welsh leanings; answers to correspondents.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 2/19/1999; 700+ words
; ...in Nottinghamshire. Walter Cromwell's one son, Thomas, was born about 1485. This was the Thomas Cromwell who rose to be Henry VIII's Chancellor and Earl of Essex. Morgan and Katherine had...
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2001 - a year of achievement
Magazine article from: Credit Management; 12/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...the Hall had been owned by Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and Chief Minister to Henry (and Oliver Cromwell's great-grandfather's...was forfeited to the King on Thomas Cromwell's attainment and subsequent...
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Monday, July 28
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 7/21/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...history on this date: 1540 - Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and King Henry VIII's chief...parliamentarian force under Oliver Cromwell takes Gainsborough. 1742 - Peace...read, but what we have done _ Thomas a Kempis, German theologian...
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Wednesday, July 28
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 7/21/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...history on this date: 1540 - Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and King Henry VIII's chief...parliamentarian force under Oliver Cromwell takes Gainsborough. 1742 - Peace...read, but what we have done _ Thomas a Kempis, German theologian...
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Sunday, July 28
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 7/21/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...history on this date: 1540 - Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and King Henry VIII's chief...parliamentarian force under Oliver Cromwell takes Gainsborough. 1742 - Peace...read, but what we have done _ Thomas a Kempis, German theologian...
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Tuesday, July 28
News Wire article from: AP Online; 7/20/2009; 700+ words
; ...year. Highlights in history on this date: 1540 - Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and King Henry VIII's chief minister, is executed...1643 - English parliamentarian force under Oliver Cromwell takes Gainsborough. 1742 - Peace of Berlin between...
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Cromwell, Thomas, Earl of Essex
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Cromwell, Thomas, Earl of Essex (1485–1540) English statesman. Cromwell was secretary to Cardinal Wolsey and...England with the King as supreme head. Cromwell's ruthless management of the Dissolution...
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Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essex
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essex 1485?-1540, English statesman...monastic lands and wealth. Much of Cromwell's unpopularity with the people, demonstrated...great chamberlain in 1539, and earl of Essex in 1540. He negotiated the king's...
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Cromwell, Thomas, earl of Essex
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Cromwell, Thomas, earl of Essex (?1485–1540), secretary to Cardinal Wolsey and...underlay it led to his downfall. A bill of attainder was passed and Cromwell was executed.
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Cromwell, Thomas (1485–1540)
Book article from: The Renaissance
...England. Thomas Cromwell was born in Putney...Bainbridge. In about 1512 Cromwell returned to England...attention of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, who hired him as a secretary. Cromwell was elected a member...the noble title of Earl of Essex. Cromwell ran afoul...
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Thomas Cromwell
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Thomas Cromwell The English statesman Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex (ca. 1485-1540), was the chief minister of Henry VIII from 1532 to 1540 and was largely responsible for revolutionary reforms in the English Church and in administration...
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