Economy of Vermont

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Also known as: Green Mountain State

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Vermont’s economy relies heavily on the service sector; its collective activities long have been the most important in terms of overall value and employment. Vermont has a low unemployment rate as compared with other states, although pockets of high employment still exist. Wages in the state are somewhat lower than the national average.

Agriculture

The nature of farming has changed in Vermont. Although it has been surpassed by manufacturing and tourism as an economic force, farming still remains important. The number of farms declined by about one-third between 1950 and 2000, and employment in farming and its related industries has dropped to only a tiny fraction of the state’s workforce. Less than half of the farms are dairy farms, the traditional mainstay of Vermont agriculture, but more than three-fourths of the state’s farm income comes from dairy products.

A move toward large-scale farms—encompassing most agricultural sectors from dairying to egg production—has raised some concerns about their effects on the environment and the decline of the family farm. Vermont is first in milk production in New England and leads the United States in the production of maple syrup. Specialty and gourmet foods have also become an important niche in Vermont agriculture. Vermont farming, because it has shaped the state’s landscape, also is important to tourism.

Manufacturing

Vermont’s hundreds of manufacturing plants reflect national industrial trends. The number of machine-tool plants in Springfield tends to expand and contract along with the national economy. The St. Albans area, in Franklin county, suffered from the decline of the railroad industry. Textile mills were once major employers in many cities, such as Winooski, but many of these have closed or moved to the South. Some computer industries have moved into Vermont. Other Vermont firms have become subsidiaries of national firms. The state’s Agency of Commerce and Community Development searches constantly for new industry, while an industrial park authority offers guidelines for establishing manufacturing facilities.

Many Vermont industries are small companies that provide specialized products. Wood and paper products are natural for a state so heavily timbered, and about one-third of Vermont’s manufacturing plants make bowls, hockey sticks, furniture, and paper of different kinds. Printing is among the major industries.

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Mining

Extractive industries contribute significantly to Vermont’s economy. Quarries in Barre are among the largest granite pits in the world, and marble from Proctor is used for constructing commercial and public buildings—such as the U.S. Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C., and the United Nations headquarters in New York City. Slate quarries operate along the Vermont–New York border.

Tourism

Tourism is the second largest component of the state’s economy. Vacation resorts, motels and hotels, and related services employ thousands of Vermonters to serve the many tourists who visit the state each year. Skiing facilities at Stowe, Dover, Sherburne, and the Mad River valley are among the many Vermont winter resorts that attract people from throughout the Northeast. During the summer, visitors hike mountain trails, search through antique shops, study exhibits in the many museums, attend musical and dramatic performances, or bicycle or drive through the state and take photographs. Thousands of “leaf-peeping” tourists fill Vermont’s roads in autumn as they look at the dramatic changing colours of the trees. The Tourism and Marketing Division of the Agency of Commerce and Community Development is active in promoting tourism, and its Vermont Life magazine depicts the state’s scenic resources.

Transportation

Vermont has limited Amtrak passenger rail service. Airline service is limited in southern and central Vermont, but the airport at Burlington provides links to cities in the Northeast and Midwest. The major road arteries are north-south routes in the Connecticut River valley and the lowland valley south of Lake Champlain. Interstate highways link Vermont with Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Quebec province. Elsewhere, roads are often winding, narrow, and hilly, following the contours of the land. None of these factors is conducive to industrial expansion, and transportation remains a major problem.