Economy of Connecticut

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Also known as: Constitution State

With limited natural resources, a well-educated and innovative citizenry has enabled Connecticut to reach high levels of productivity. Connecticut’s creative genius—manifested in such innovators as Eli Whitney, Samuel Colt, and Charles Goodyear—has produced large numbers of significant inventions and patents.

Connecticut, like other areas of the Northeast, lost much traditional industry to the Sunbelt in the 1940s and ’50s, but the ’70s and ’80s were marked by economic rebound. Since then Connecticut has ranked among the top states in the country in terms of personal income per capita and has had one of the country’s lowest unemployment rates. Labour unions have been strong and may be given partial credit for the high wages and good working conditions characteristic of most Connecticut factories. Business is also a powerful force in the state. The Connecticut Business and Industry Association is sophisticated and influential, and there are many active local chambers of commerce.

Agriculture and fishing

Throughout the 20th century agriculture declined in importance, and it is now a relatively minor element in the economy. A precipitous decline in the number of farms resulted in the enactment in 1978 of a farmland preservation program. Livestock and animal products are the major source of farm income. Connecticut’s farms produce substantial quantities of milk, eggs, poultry, and vegetables for local consumption and one important export crop, shade-grown tobacco, used mainly for cigar wrappers.

Except for the oyster fisheries and the historically important whaling industry, commercial fishing has never been of much importance to the state. The oyster industry is gradually overcoming the devastation caused by natural calamities such as disease outbreaks and by man-made pollution of the coastal waters.

Resources and power

Historically, mining was important, but the last iron and copper mines closed long ago. The state’s high ranking in value added by manufacturing is mainly due to its importing of nearly all needed raw materials. Only sand, gravel, stone, feldspar, clay, and mica are still produced within the state. A large number of minerals were first discovered in Connecticut by mineralogists from Yale University in New Haven. Quarries continued to yield interesting finds until the late 20th century, when many of them were closed to collectors by suburban real estate developments.

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Nuclear power plants produce more than half of the state’s annual electricity output, and much of the rest is generated at thermal plants. The state has promoted incentives to develop renewable resources, notably methane from biomass sources. The electricity generated using this fuel constitutes a small but significant amount of the state total; hydroelectricity, however, represents only a small proportion of the power from renewables.

Manufacturing

Manufacturing has long been the mainstay of Connecticut’s economy, though its relative importance has lessened, especially as federal defense contracts have diminished. Among the items that have been manufactured in Connecticut by long tradition are pins, clocks, silverware, sewing machines, firearms (notably Winchester rifles and Colt pistols), and many brass products. Submarines were produced in Groton beginning in 1924, including the first nuclear-powered submarine, the Nautilus. High-technology companies have grown in importance since the 1970s.

Services, labour, and taxation

Services have come to dominate Connecticut’s economy, and the health and tourist sectors have grown dramatically since the late 20th century. Financial services, insurance, and real estate have also grown considerably. As interstate banking regulations have changed, many local institutions have followed the nationwide trend of merging into national banks. The state is often referred to as the country’s insurance centre and Hartford as “Insurance City.” Marine insurance was the first concern of Connecticut companies, and eventually the coverage that they offered expanded to many forms of casualty insurance. Some of the largest insurance companies in the country are based in Connecticut, and the state is headquarters to many leading national corporations, notably those focused on technology.

Local governments rely almost entirely on property taxes, supplemented by state and federal aid. In 1991 Connecticut adopted an essentially flat-rate income tax after a long and bitter legislative debate. Subsequently the state sales tax rate was reduced, as were corporate taxes.

Transportation and telecommunications

Connecticut’s railroad network is a basic link in the BostonWashington, D.C., rail corridor. The first railroads were constructed to bring the produce of the agricultural interior to Connecticut ports. Each of the larger river valleys—the Housatonic, Naugatuck, Connecticut, Willimantic, and Quinebaug—once supported its own railroad. The line along the coast was completed in 1852. Until 1930 the railroads flourished with the expanding Connecticut economy, but highway competition for passengers and products reduced rail traffic severely. Most of the river lines have dropped passenger service; freight service continues on some, but on others it has been abandoned. Amtrak operates passenger trains through Connecticut linking New York City and Boston. Commuter service on the (New York) Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s Metro-North New Haven line is heavily used between southern Connecticut and New York City.

Interstate highways crisscross the state, but they are concentrated in the densely settled coastal and Connecticut River valley regions. Connecticut was a pioneer of the limited-access highway. The first section of the Merritt Parkway, from the New York state line to near Milford, opened in 1938; it is still acclaimed for its scenery and fine design. In June 1983 several lives were lost with the collapse of the Mianus River Bridge. The governor and legislature responded with the country’s first comprehensive infrastructure renewal program for roads and bridges, and these have subsequently been considerably improved.

Bradley International Airport, north of Hartford, is the major air terminal, but there are a number of smaller airports throughout the state that offer regional services. The port of New Haven is one of the largest in New England. Other major ports are at Bridgeport and New London.