Direct federal employment and procurement spending accounts for almost 40 percent of all economic activity in Northern Virginia, which in turn accounts for more than 40 percent of all economic activity in Virginia. Sequestration has hobbled Northern Virginia’s growth. However, George Mason University’s leading economic index suggests better times are on the horizon
After a spectacular first half of this decade, the regional economy decelerated in 2007. A combinati...
2015 has been another “Goldilocks” year – not too hot, not too cold – economically speaking. We grew...
Sequestration, it turns out, did not damage our regional economy nearly as much as originally antici...
Direct federal employment and procurement spending accounts for almost 40 percent of all economic ac...
NOVA now accounts for 37 percent of all employment in Virginia, but approximately 45 percent of the ...
2017 was the first year since 2006 that each of Virginia’s metropolitan areas exhibited positive eco...
The Commonwealth is experiencing relatively slow economic growth as it gradually transitions from an...
Many indicators of economic performance suggest that the Commonwealth’s metropolitan areas grew in 2...
The Commonwealth’s economy is the sum of its regional parts, however different they may be. After mo...
The Virginia economy grew 0.02 percent in real terms in 2014, will grow only about 1.33 percent in 2...
After an anemic recovery from the Great Recession and sequestration, Virginia’s economy picked up th...
The Commonwealth’s lackluster economic performance in 2016 highlights a lost decade of slow economic...
If Virginia is to continue its recovery from the pandemic economic shock of 2020, this growth will l...
Virginia’s economy is poised to grow for the fifth consecutive year. The number of jobs and people e...
Virginia’s economic recovery in 2021 has been driven by the performance of some, but not all, of its...
After a spectacular first half of this decade, the regional economy decelerated in 2007. A combinati...
2015 has been another “Goldilocks” year – not too hot, not too cold – economically speaking. We grew...
Sequestration, it turns out, did not damage our regional economy nearly as much as originally antici...
Direct federal employment and procurement spending accounts for almost 40 percent of all economic ac...
NOVA now accounts for 37 percent of all employment in Virginia, but approximately 45 percent of the ...
2017 was the first year since 2006 that each of Virginia’s metropolitan areas exhibited positive eco...
The Commonwealth is experiencing relatively slow economic growth as it gradually transitions from an...
Many indicators of economic performance suggest that the Commonwealth’s metropolitan areas grew in 2...
The Commonwealth’s economy is the sum of its regional parts, however different they may be. After mo...
The Virginia economy grew 0.02 percent in real terms in 2014, will grow only about 1.33 percent in 2...
After an anemic recovery from the Great Recession and sequestration, Virginia’s economy picked up th...
The Commonwealth’s lackluster economic performance in 2016 highlights a lost decade of slow economic...
If Virginia is to continue its recovery from the pandemic economic shock of 2020, this growth will l...
Virginia’s economy is poised to grow for the fifth consecutive year. The number of jobs and people e...
Virginia’s economic recovery in 2021 has been driven by the performance of some, but not all, of its...
After a spectacular first half of this decade, the regional economy decelerated in 2007. A combinati...
2015 has been another “Goldilocks” year – not too hot, not too cold – economically speaking. We grew...
Sequestration, it turns out, did not damage our regional economy nearly as much as originally antici...