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For more info= rmation:        &= nbsp;           &nbs= p;            &= nbsp;           &nbs= p;            &= nbsp; For immediate release

 

Ms. Anneliese Dickman, J.D.

Senior Researcher

Public Policy Forum

414-276-8240

adic= kman@publicpolicyforum.org

 

 

 

Sou= theastern Wisconsin<= span style=3D'font-size:16.0pt'> experiences loss of personal income<= /span>

Public Policy Forum creates new index to measure region’s economic well-being

 

 

MILWAUKEE, WisconsinMay 16, 2005 – During the ten years from 1993 through 2002, the seven counties of southeastern Wisc= onsin have experienced a net loss of $2 billion in personal income, according to a report issued by the Milwaukee-based Public Policy Forum. 

 

“The region isn’= ;t attracting enough new personal income to counter its losses, and the trend = has been greater net losses each year,” says Anneliese Dickman, the Forum’s senior researcher. 

 

The Forum developed a ̶= 0;net income migration” index using data from the Internal Revenue Service = and the U.S. Census Bureau as a barometer of how well the region is doing economically.  Net income migr= ation is the amount of income that flows into the region minus the amount that fl= ows out of the region annually.  “This is perhaps the most striking measure of how well a regio= n is doing,” says Dickman.

 

The report says that, on av= erage, people moving out of southeastern Wisconsin to other places in the state or country make more money than people moving = into our region from other places.  Positive income migration would require attracting high-earning residents, she says. 

 

Even though income in the r= egion increased to almost $42 billion from $32.5 billion during the period the st= udy covers, it would have been $2 billion higher had it not been for the region’s income drain.  “That’s a significant a= mount to lose when one considers how much tax revenue could have been captured,&#= 8221; says Dickman.  “Especial= ly in times of government budget shortfalls.”

 

Other report findings inclu= de . . .

 

  • On average, residents of southeastern Wisconsin w= ho have not moved earn more than either newcomers or those leaving;
  • Contrary to conventional wisdom, the people who m= ove from Cook County to southeastern Wisconsin earn more= , on average, than those who move to Cook County from the region;
  • Every county in southeastern Wisconsin loses more income to Madison’s = Dane County than it gains from D= ane County;
  • Kenosha and Ozau= kee counties are the only counties in southeastern = Wisconsin to gain more income from outside the region than they lose;
  • Milwaukee and Kenosha counties contribute income to the rest = of southeastern Wisconsin;
  • Walworth County gains more income from southeastern= Wisconsin t= han it does from beyond the region.

 

The Public Policy Forum is facilitating creation of a shared vision action plan for regional cooperati= on in southeastern Wisconsin based on research and analysis.  During the next several years, the Forum will encourage the region to think and act in ways that promote its long-term economic and social health, including . . .

 

  • Developing a Southeastern Wisconsin Leadership Network;
  • Establishing priorities for regional action;
  • Making the case to citizens that regional coopera= tion is vital to our future;
  • Benchmarking progress toward the shared vision.

 

Milwaukee-based Public Poli= cy Forum – which was established in 1913 as a local government watchdog –= ; is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to enhancing the effectiven= ess of government and the development of southeastern Wisconsin through objective research of regional public policy issues.

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