Providence: Economy
Providence: Economy
Major Industries and Commercial Activity
Providence is a major industrial, commercial, medical, and financial center for New England with an economy based on manufacturing and service enterprises. The city is a major supplier of jewelry and silverware to the United States and Europe. Providence is home to four multibillion-dollar financial concerns and many smaller ones. Tourism and conventions are emerging industries. As the capital of Rhode Island, Providence supports a number of government-related jobs.
Items and goods produced: jewelry, silverware, and related products; electrical equipment, textiles, transportation equipment, fabricated metals, rubber and plastic goods, supplies for the Department of Defense and federal government, machinery, instruments, primary metals
Incentive Programs—New and Existing Companies
The Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation (RIEDC) serves as a one-stop clearing house for a variety of financing plans and financing agencies to assist enterprises in all phases of economic development. RIEDC is making it easier, faster and more efficient for businesses to access such tools as: financing, permitting and job training assistance; real estate and site location analysis; export and government contract assistance; enterprise zone counseling; information on economic issues and tax incentives; and creative problem-solving.
Local programs
The support services of the Providence Department of Planning and Development include research and feasibility studies; site planning and design review; help in obtaining low-cost financing and other incentives, through federal, state, city and private programs. The Providence Economic Development Corporation administers the Providence Economic Development corporation Revolving Loan Program, with a choice of rates pegged below the prime rate of interest for a period of 10 years. The Providence Neighborhood Business District Program oversees infrastructure improvements; it also offers market research and planning services for new and existing businesses, and grants for related improvements.
State programs
Rhode Island provides a corporate income tax rate reduction for those firms increasing employment. Manufacturers and traded service firms paying above average wages or investing significantly in work training are able to take a ten percent credit on purchased or leased equipment. Businesses may also take a significant credit for expenses for approved job training programs. The Jobs Development Act permanently reduced companies' corporate income tax rate. Companies with 100 employees or more receive a quarter-point reduction for every 50 full-time jobs created. Companies with fewer than 100 employees will receive a quarter-point reduction for every 10 jobs created during a three-year period
Rhode Island offers tax credits for investment, new employment, interest, and donations made in areas designated as Enterprise Zones. Two of those zones are situated in the city of Providence. Many enterprise zone benefits extend to those who develop any of the state's designated historic industrial mill structures or historic preservation areas. Other sectors which have special tax incentives are the financial services, telecommunications, and insurance industries.
Job training programs
Rhode Island has job training tax credits equal to half of a company's training expenditure, and job training grants that can be customized to the company's needs. There are also tax credits for apprenticeship programs and adult education classes. Providence/Cranston Job Training, through netWORKri centers helps disadvantaged workers find jobs, provides job search skills and job training, and has a summer youth employment program.
Development Projects
Capital Center, the downtown area of Providence, is experiencing a residential building boom, with $1.8 billion in projects either under construction or in the planning stages as of 2005. A new $80 million addition to the Westin hotel broke ground in 2005, consisting of a 31-story tower with 200 hotel rooms and 100 luxury condominiums. The Hotel Dolce Villa boutique hotel—formerly a jewelry manufacturing company—opened in 2005 after a $2 million make-over. Currently under construction is GTECH Holding Corporation's new 12-story headquarters in Capital Center, downtown Providence, the first new corporate office building to be constructed there since 1988. Waterplace, also begun in 2005, is a $100 million, two-tower condominium project, and will be one of the tallest buildings in Waterplace Park. Capitol Cove, a project also in Capital Center, will consist of 255 high-end apartments in two towers. In 2005, Roger Williams University put its Providence branch up for sale for the booming redevelopment market.
Economic Development Information: Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation, One West Exchange Street, Providence, RI 02903; telephone (401)222-2601; fax (401)222-2102. Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce, 30 Exchange Terrace, Providence, RI 02903, telephone: (401)521-5000; fax (401)751-2434, email chamber@provchamber.com. City of Providence Department of Planning and Development, 400 Westminster St., Providence, RI 02903; telephone (401)351-4300; email planning@ids.net
Commercial Shipping
Excellent transportation facilities, including the Port of Providence, New England's second largest deepwater port and a Foreign Trade Zone, make Providence a major industrial center. The principal waterborne commodities handled at the port are petroleum products, cement, scrap metal, lumber, automobiles, and conventional and containerized general cargo. Theodore Francis Green State Airport, with a new 323,000-square-foot, multilevel terminal, has 15 gates and has incorporated a cargo development facility. Direct trucking service is available to every state, Mexico and most of Canada on a multimillion-dollar highway system. Daily rail service to Rhode Island industrial sites is provided by the Providence & Worcester Railroad, which allows access to the entire United States and Canadian rail systems.
Labor Force and Employment Outlook
Rhode Island boasts the highest number of trained workers per square mile in the country. The labor force is described as mature, skilled in diverse areas, educated, efficient, and offering high productivity at reasonable wage levels. The fastest-growing occupational groups are professional and technical workers in new and varied industries; opportunities are expanding in the service and financial sectors, as well as in hospitality. Providence looks forward to continued expansion of technological fields.
The following is a summary of data regarding the Providence metropolitan area labor force, 2004 annual averages.
Size of nonagricultural labor force: 581,300
Number of workers employed in . . .
natural resources and mining: 300
construction: 25,600
manufacturing: 75,700
trade, transportation and utilities: 102,700
information: 11,700
financial activities: 37,200
professional and business services: 60,900
educational and health services: 106,900
leisure and hospitality: 58,900
other services: 26,500
government: 74,900
Average hourly earnings of production workers employed in manufacturing: $13.37 (2004)
Unemployment rate: 4.3% (May 2005)
| Largest employers (2004) |
Number of employees |
| Rhode Island Hospital |
5,853 |
| Brown University |
4,450 |
| U.S. Postal Service |
4,000 |
| Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island |
2,640 |
| Miriam Hospital |
1,993 |
| Bank of America/Fleet Bank (Providence only) |
1,725 |
| Verizon |
1,400 |
| Roger Williams Medical Center |
1,340 |
| Johnson & Wales Uninversity |
1,200 |
| Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Rhode Island |
1,198 |
| Providence Journal Co. |
1,100 |
Cost of Living
The following is a summary of data regarding several key cost of living factors in the Providence area.
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Average House Price: $472,818
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Cost of Living Index: 127.7 (U.S. average = 100.0)
State income tax rate: 3.75% to 9.9%, applied only to the Federal Adjusted Gross Income, minus deductions
State sales tax rate: 7%
Local income tax rate: None
Local sales tax rate: None
Property tax rate: $29.65 per $1,000 of assessed valuation for residential properties, $37.00 for commercial properties.
Economic Information: Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation, One West Exchange St., Providence, RI 02903; telephone (401)222-2601; fax (401)222-2102
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
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Edmond Halley's Life Table and Its Uses*
Magazine article from: Journal of Legal Economics; 8/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...denotes formulae omitted.) Edmond Halley (1656-1742) was a remarkable...economics, and actuarial science. Halley was fortunate to have been born into...first-rate education for his son. Halley enrolled in Oxford University at...
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Edmond Halley - explorer. (the comet's namesake was also an 18th century explorer sailing as far as Antarctica)
Magazine article from: History Today; 6/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; Edmond Halley is best known by the comet that bears his name, but at the turn of the...Atlantic standards. It was maritime history's least likely Blackbeard -- Edmond Halley, FRS. Appearances deceived; Halley was no buccaneer, yet Bryant...
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City scientist Toby is following footsteps of Halley
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 2/25/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...his name to a comet - but when it came to charting new territories astronomer Edmond Halley blazed his own trail. Halley the man's fame may now be eclipsed by Halley's Comet, but in 1698 he was being hailed a hero for embarking on one of the...
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Halley's Comet is coming.
Magazine article from: Saturday Evening Post; 5/1/1985; ; 700+ words
; ...best bet for the first sighting of Halley's (pronounced as in "alleys...learned the Earth would pass through Halley's tail, many people were panicked...serendipitously appeared on the market. Edmond Halley got excited about comets in 1682...
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Blazing a path.(Mark Twain and Halley's Comet)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 5/1/2009; ; 669 words
; ...have in common? In a remarkable coincidence, Halley's Comet was sweeping through the sky in both...1835, and the year he died, 1910. Why is Halley's Comet so famous? Before Edmond Halley (1656-1742) published his mathematical calculations...
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A mote of dust. (Comet Halley)
Magazine article from: Saturday Evening Post; 3/1/1986; ; 700+ words
; ...Eiseley had lived to see it. Comet Halley is unique in our epoch--a bright...human species. You look up and see Halley's Comet--through a pair of binoculars...perihelion passage of 1682) that Edmond Halley saw the summer after he and Mary...
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Halley's quest; a selfless genius and his troubled Paramore.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 12/1/2006; 485 words
; 0309095948 Halley's quest; a selfless genius and his troubled Paramore. Wakefield...261 pages $27.95 Hardcover Q115 Science writer Wakefield describes Edmond Halley's greatest achievement, which was not predicting the course of the...
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Gravity tugs at the center of priority battle.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Science News; 12/18/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...incomparable treatise," says Edmond Halley, clerk to the Royal Society for...inverse-square law. According to Halley, however, Newton insists that he...had not come upon it by accident, Halley says. In the latest development...
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Books: Heroes carrying microscopes David Wootton enjoys a study of the men - and women - who founded modern science
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 9/5/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...ambitions of men such as Newton, Boyle, Halley, Leeuwenhoek (the discoverer of...his vacuum pump were important to Edmond Halley in designing a diving bell to raise...plant life. Second to Hooke comes Halley, astronomer, cartographer, and...
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Cape expertise builds ice station; Design is a world first.(News)
Newspaper article from: Cape Argus (South Africa); 6/28/2007; 700+ words
; ...part of the manufacturing team for the new Halley VI Research Station which is to be built...which is the overall project manager. The Halley station, which is named after astronomer Edmond Halley, is considered to be the UK's most isolated...
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Halley, Edmond
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
Halley, Edmond ( b. London, England, 29 October 1656[?]; d. Greenwich, England, 14 January 1743) astronomy, geophysics. Halley was the eldest son of Edmond Halley, a prosperous landowner, salter, and sopmaker of the City...
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Halley, Edmond (1656-1743)
Book article from: World of Earth Science
Halley, Edmond (1656-1743) English astronomer The son of a wealthy merchant, Edmond Halley was attracted to astronomy after seeing two comets as a child. By the...
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Edmond Halley
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Edmond Halley , 1656-1742, English astronomer and...took 18 years. Other discoveries of Halley's are the proper motions of the stars...A. Ronan (1970); L. Baldwin, Edmond Halley and His Comet (1985).
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Halley’s Comet
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
Halley ’ s Comet Edmond Halley ’ s prediction Halley...named after English astronomer Edmond Halley (1656 – 1742), the...space probe Giotto are correct. Edmond Halley ’ s prediction In the...
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Halley's comet
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Halley's comet or Comet Halley , periodic comet named for Edmond Halley, who observed it in 1682 and identified it as the one observed in 1531 and 1607. Halley did not live to see its return in 1758, close to the time he predicted. It reappeared...
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