Sunday, May 19, 2019

The 5 C’s of Arizona







Anyone who has lived in Arizona for a while knows that the 5 C’s are copper, cattle, cotton, citrus and climate. All 5 of these were the core of Arizona’s economy when it first became a state, and all of them are still a major part of the economy today, although less so then they were in 1912.


In terms of employment, though, the top 5 industries today would be the unpronounceable acronym of TGPLF, which stand for trade, government, professional and business services, leisure and hospitality, and financial activity.


One of the reasons that tariffs are always a bad idea is that Arizona exports $9 billion a year to Mexico, and over $2 billion a year to Canada. The state also exports over $1 billion a year to China. Overall, Arizona exports 22% of all the exports produced in the United States.


The Arizona Office of Tourism is still enamored of the glamour of “the old West”, since the office considers the major industries to be manufacturing, mining and tourism.

Flying “under the radar” are a few surprising facts about the state’s economy:

1)    Arizona was ranked first in the United States by the Solar Energy Industries Association in terms of employment per capita in the solar energy industry in 2012. The Arizona Commerce Authority cited more than 300 days of sunshine a year and a renewable energy tax incentive program that offered up to a 10 percent credit on income taxes and a 75 percent tax reduction on property taxes.

2)   Bioscience is a rapidly growing industry in Arizona, and it currently employs 100,000 people.

3)   High tech manufacturing (including defense) is also a rapidly growing industry. One example of this manufacturing is a company formerly known as Hughes Missile Systems Co. Today, it’s known as Raytheon, and it is the world’s largest supplier of guided missiles. 

Today, there are some interesting twists to the copper mining industry in Arizona . As recently as 2007, Arizona was still the leading copper producing state in the country. As of 2012, there were 10 active copper mines in the state, and another mine (the Resolution Copper project) is still under consideration, but not without controversy. Part of the controversy about the Resolution project is that it is a joint venture owned by two foreign companies. More importantly, t
he mine would destroy an area set aside in 1955 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower which is sacred to the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation. Both the Oak Flat Campground, an area dotted with petroglyphs and historic and prehistoric sites, and the steep cliffs at Apache Leap would be affected. In July 2015, a march protesting the land swap arrived in Washington DC.

Another little known fact is that Winston Churchill has a connection to the former mining town of Jerome, Arizona. When Jerome was just a small mining camp, financing was needed to pull the copper out of the ground. New York financier Eugene Jerome provided the financing, but never visited the town. He was a nephew of Leonard Jerome, who was Jennie Jerome’s father. When Jennie married Lord Randolph Churchill, their first child was named Winston Churchill, and he went on to become the Prime Minister of England – twice.


Jerome, incidentally, is just one of the many “ghost towns” in Arizona, Jerome has numerous ghosts, including a spectral cat that is still seen by guests at the Mile High Inn today.  







If “the spirit moves you”, you can also explore the rest of the Arizona ghost towns in a book titled, “Arizona Ghost Towns and Mining Camps”





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