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News & Features

Virginia Business 20th Anniversary
Economic trends since 1986

READER RESOURCES
READER REACTION
Virginia Business
March 2006

The real estate boom and bust of the late 1980s. Particularly in Northern Virginia, fortunes are made and lost in a short period of time. The bust precipitates the savings and loan crisis of the early 1990s.

The acquisition of Virginia banks by out-of-state banks in the late 1990s. North Carolina’s intrastate banking rules dating to the 1960s allow its banks to reach a critical mass much faster than those in Virginia, and these larger institutions go on a buying spree in Virginia.

The emergence of Northern Virginia’s high-tech sector since the 1980s. The systems integration boom of the 1980s is followed by the Internet/telecommunications boom of the 1990s. Dulles-based America Online introduces millions to the Internet.

The dot-com boom of the late 1990s and the bust of 2000. The wild enthusiasm for Internet startups evaporates in the face of the hard economic realities of a new century.

The decline of the textile and furniture industries in Virginia’s Southside. Textiles and furniture companies lose out to cheaper production overseas.

The waning position of tobacco in Virginia agriculture. Domestic demand slows, and restrictions grow on smoking in public places. Quotas and subsidies end. A national settlement between tobacco manufacturers and the states begins providing funds for farming communities to develop new industries.

The unfulfilled promise of the “Silicon Dominion” in the mid-1990s. Toshiba sets up shop in Manassas, and Infineon Technologies opens in Richmond. But Motorola, the company that started all of the “Silicon Dominion” talk, never builds a plant in Virginia.

The coordination of statewide and regional economic development efforts. A bipartisan economic development effort starts with the Baliles administration.

Major corporate relocations. Philip Morris USA moves its headquarters to Richmond in 2003, reasserting its influence in an area where it once was the top private employer. Following its merger with Exxon in 1999, Mobil Corp. retains a regional headquarters in Merrifield. It had moved its corporate headquarters to Fairfax County in the mid-1970s, identifying the county and Northern Virginia as a prime location for major companies.
Emergence of the homeland security industry since 9/11. The national emphasis on security creates tens of thousands of jobs, primarily in Northern Virginia

Economic swings caused by military restructuring. Military spending is a double-edged sword for many areas of the state, especially Hampton Roads. The local economy booms during buildups and suffers during cutbacks. Hampton’s Fort Monroe is slated for elimination in the latest round of base closings while the fate of Naval Air Station Oceana still hangs in the balance.

Former Virginia Business Editor Karl Rhodes, an original member of the staff, contributed to this list. He now is editor of Richmond Alumni Magazine at the University of Richmond.

 


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