I ran into someone at a supermarket recently and he said “You study this stuff. How can this place be so busy at 11 am on a Friday morning? How come people aren’t at work?” It’s actually pretty simple. Depending…
Continue ReadingWorking on the highway, laying down the blacktop
One of my all time favourite albums was Springsteen’s “Born in the USA”. I listened to it non-stop one summer every day as I worked flipping burgers in Alberta as a newly minted MBA. Workin’ on the Highway was a…
Continue ReadingThe sometime paradox of local firms and economic development
I had a long, winding conversation this week with someone on the topic of why some local firms seem hostile to economic development efforts. From Salesforce.com to Molson Breweries to UPS and dozens more – when there are efforts to…
Continue ReadingMay the Salesforce (dot com) be with you
When Radian6 was acquired last year, a number of folks in government and in economic development fretted that Salesforce.com would end up shutting the NB operations down and moving what was left to its head office in the United States.…
Continue ReadingEngineering innovation
In the innovation for economic development course I completed a couple of weeks ago, one of the professors said that Cabinets with a large concentration of engineers tend to do a better job of developing innovation agendas. He cited Singapore…
Continue ReadingAll of the above strategy for jobs growth
I like the BC Jobs Plan because it recognizes the importance of ‘jobs’ first and foremost and also it gets specific about where those jobs are likely to be created. I have said for a while that we need to…
Continue ReadingNew Brunswick’s changing employment picture: Four year snapshot
The month over month labour force survey is helpful in showing recent trends in the employment situation but a slightly longer term view is a more accurate representation of how things are changing. The following charts show the change in…
Continue ReadingBonjour, Chile
A Chilean firm has bought Flakeboard Co. Time to get on the plane. I remember back in the early 1990s when New Brunswick was starting to become a serious player in farmed salmon – so was Chile in a big…
Continue ReadingThe urban/rural debate: Part 12
I wanted to revisit this issue of the urban/rural debate in New Brunswick in light of a couple of slides I developed for my SJ Board of Trade presentation this week. It goes directly to this issue of becoming more…
Continue ReadingNew Brunswick is not too rural, it is not urban enough
There is a pervasive view that in order for New Brunswick to grow it has to empty its rural population into its urban centres. We are too rural and that is the problem we are told. Once again many people…
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