11,045 research outputs found
Hotel Tax Collections and a Local Mega-Event
Cities compete for the opportunity to host events that draw large crowds of visitors. The argument is that these visitors bring with them lots of spending in hotels and restaurants, providing jobs for workers in the service industry, and generating sales tax revenues for the city. In many places, there is also a separate tax on hotel and motel accommodations. Indeed, taxes on accommodations are one example of jurisdictions exporting their tax burdens, as people who pay the accommodations taxes are visitors. This paper looks for the beneficial impact of a megaevent by focusing on the accommodations tax collections in and around the jurisdiction that hosts the event.sports, South Carolina, NASCAR, college football, tourism
THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE COAST TO THE SOUTH CAROLINA ECONOMY
The South Carolina counties classified as coastal are Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester, Georgetown, Horry and Jasper. These eight counties comprise the coastal zone management region of the Ocean and Coastal Resource Management division of the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control The report examines the influence of these counties on the State's economy.Community/Rural/Urban Development,
South Carolina's Textile and Apparel Industries: An Analysis of Trends in Traditional and Emerging Sectors
Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Water and erosion damage to coastal structures: South Carolina Coast, Hurricane Hugo, 1989
Hurricane Hugo hit U.S. Mainland on September 21, 1989
just north of Charleston, South Carolina. It was billed
as the most costly hurricane on record. The loss on the
mainland alone exceeded 7 billion dollars, more than
15,000 homes were destroyed and the loss of lives
exceeded forty.
This article documents one aspect of the multi-destructions
caused by the hurricane - the water and
erosion damage on water front or near water front
properties. A general damage survey was given first,
followed by assessment on the performance of various
engineered and non-engineering structures, on the major
factors contributing to failures. Conclusions were then
drawn with recommendations for future improvement. (26pp.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH CAROLINA: AN OVERVIEW OF RECENT TRENDS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS
This paper summarizes recent employment and earnings trends in South Carolina and reviews changes in the competitive environment that may impact future employment opportunities and earnings for the state's workers. The new competitive environment is characterized by greater global competition, a continuting shift from goods-producing to service-producing industries, new production organizations and technologies, and industrial restructuring. The implications of these structural changes for the state's businesses and workers are discussed, and public policy initiatives to prepare for these changes are suggested.Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Geospatial distribution and population substructure of subgroups of US ethnic minorities: implications for perpetuation of health disparities and paucity of precision medicine
Substructure due to familial-associated divisions exists in all large populations. Geographical heterogeneity in US ethnic minorities is a function of historical, social, political, and economic factors overlaying regional geographical biodiversity. Using geospatial, historical, demographic, genetic, and epidemiological databases, we identify 40 US microethnic isolates across the US, the “minorities within ethnic minorities” and locate their geospatial distributions within the US. Key components of the environment relevant to health disparities are identified and elaborated in terms of their impact on genomics. US ethnic minority microethnic isolates often have distinct genetic and social histories from the US ethnic majority that put these isolates at a disadvantage in the quest for access to relevant, precision medicine because of the magnitude of imbedded (North Atlantic Euro-American) bias in the existing databases. However, these microethnic isolates are also at a disadvantage when simply aggregated with their nearest ethnic minority macroethnic group (e.g., generic African American). The use of geospatial and ethnographic analyses has the potential to accelerate the accurate identification of heretofore disadvantaged subgroups of ethnic minority groups, bringing them into the mainstream of genomic diversity studies and healthcare acces
Yawkey Foundations 2010 Grants Report
Contains mission statement, board chair and president's message; grantee profiles in the areas of health, education, and human services; 2010 grants list and highlights; grant guidelines; and list of board members
Rip currents: how the recession affected seasonal employment in one beach town
Related link(s): http://www.richmondfed.org/publications/research/region_focus/2009/summer/feature4_weblinks.cfmEmployment ; Economic conditions ; Tourism
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