Study reveals FAPC’s 10-year economic impact
STILLWATER, Okla. – A study conducted by the Robert M. Kerr Food and Agricultural Products Center on the campus of Oklahoma State University shows the center has had significant economic impact in the state of Oklahoma.
“The FAPC opened for business in January 1997 and has assisted more than 1,000
Oklahoma clients through 3,000 technical and business projects,” said Rodney
Holcomb, FAPC Agribusiness Specialist. “This study was conducted to quantify the
statewide impacts of these efforts.”
Holcomb said the study surveyed
FAPC clients to assess the changes in employment and sales these clients
attribute to FAPC assistance.
In addition, respondents were asked to provide an
assessment of the value they associate with various services and workshops
offered by FAPC.
In 2006, the 343 responding businesses had total sales
exceeding $1.9 billion and provided around 8,700 full-time and 325 part-time
jobs for Oklahomans. The combined direct, indirect and induced economic
contributions of these companies through other local businesses such as the
service and transportation industries were more than $6.3 billion generated and
52,000 jobs.
Several respondents also provided information about
business operations before and after receiving assistance from FAPC. The study
indicated 2.1 percent of these companies’ full-time positions and 1.5 percent of
part-time positions were created between the time the firms received assistance
from FAPC and 2006. In that time, companies providing sales information
experienced 16.95 percent sales growth. Of these job and sales increases, the
firms attributed 157 total jobs and almost $93 million in sales directly to FAPC
assistance. The direct, indirect and induced impacts these companies directly
attributed to FAPC assistance were $308 million and 800 jobs.
“Lawmakers
such as the late Sen. Robert M. Kerr, who helped create the FAPC, hoped that the
tax dollars spent on the Center would reap benefits for the state, Holcomb said.
“It’s good to have affirmation that the state funds supporting FAPC have
generated exceptional returns for Oklahoma.”
The FAPC is a
96,000-square-foot stand-alone building that houses animal harvesting, food
manufacturing, grain milling, sensory profiling, food microbiology and
analytical laboratory facilities, as well as conference facilities and
applications laboratories for demonstration and prototype testing.
By
offering large and small businesses, producers and entrepreneurs access to
faculty and staff with expertise in business and technical disciplines, the FAPC
strives to discover, develop and deliver information that will stimulate and
support the growth of value-added food and agricultural products and processing
in Oklahoma.
REPORTER:
Ruth Bobbitt
Communications Graduate Assistant
Robert M. Kerr Food and Ag Products Center
MEDIA CONTACT:
Mandy Gross
Communications Specialist
Robert M. Kerr Food and Ag Products Center
144 FAPC
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, OK 74078
Phone: 405-744-0442
E-Mail: mandy.gross@okstate.edu
