Providence’s Ranking for Best Performing Cities Falls Dramatically

GoLocalProv Business Team

Providence’s Ranking for Best Performing Cities Falls Dramatically

One of the leading U.S. research groups in America found that Providence has become even less competitive versus other U.S. cities relative to creating and sustaining jobs and economic growth from 2015 to 2016.

The Providence-Warwick metro area dropped over twenty spots in the Milken Institute's Best-Performing Cities for 2016, having been ranked in the top half of large cities (#95) in 2015, to the bottom half (#118) this past year. Providence now ranks significantly behind Worcester, MA.

2016 Rankings: See Interactive Map BELOW

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“America’s best-performing cities yet again demonstrated their innovation advantage aligned with high levels of entrepreneurship,” says Ross DeVol, chief research officer of the Milken Institute and one of the report’s authors. “That is witnessed not just in ‘traditional’ technology but in medical and financial services.”

The index ranks U.S. metropolitan areas by how well they are creating and sustaining jobs and economic growth. The components include job, wage and salary, and technology growth. In most years, these give a good indication of the underlying structural performance of regional economics.

According to Milken, "Top-ranked San Jose’s tech-fueled economy continues its two year hot streak, with high job growth and average annual wages of $111,000, versus $60,300 for the nation overall. It is the softer side of tech that is propelling the Silicon Valley economy: cloud computing, data processing and hosting services, social media and more."

 

Providence's Downward Trends

"Overall, for the best performing cities, we saw the strongest growth down south and the west coast. The only one outside those regions in the top twenty-give was Michigan," Milken analyst Minoli Ratnatunga told GoLocal.

Providence fell in almost all measures from 2015 to 2016

 

"In Massachusetts, and Connecticut, they're all generally not doing as well. Boston was up 51 to 37, but Cambridge dropped, Worcester dropped, and all of the Connecticut metros were quite low," said Ratnatunga. There were some upsides for Providence, however, she said. 

"One of the strengths Providence has is a high concentration of high-wage jobs, and the strength of the high tech sector," said Ratnatunga. "When I looked into detail of where you've been adding jobs in last year, the top category was professional science and tech services. and that includes tech growth and skills jobs that are what's been growing in successful tech metros. In Providence, that category for the year grew 4.4%." "So that category added more jobs than any other," said Ratnatunga. "Second was bars and restaurants, and then specific trade contractors....and a lot of the the other top categories were in retail."

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