Vol. 11, No. 12 / Ship and Boat Building in the United States and Gulf of Mexico Region
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June 27, 2014
May 23, 2014
In this issue, Dr. Posadas compiled and summarized the trends in the gross regional product, and number, wages, salaries, and earnings of workers and owners of the ship and boat building industry from 2014 to 2020 or 2021. The socioeconomic characteristics of workers and owners in 2020 were described. These long-term data on ship and boat building illustrate the significance of the industry in the national and Gulf economies. The direct impacts of the global pandemic on ship and boat building are presented in annual percent changes in output and jobs from 2019 to 2021.
Ship and boat building; gross regional product; jobs; wages, salaries, and earnings; socioeconomic characteristics; workers and owners
The NAICS (2021) sector 33661 comprises of establishments primarily engaged in operating shipyards or boatyards. Shipyards are fixed facilities with drydocks and watercraft typically suitable or intended for other than personal or recreational use. Boats are defined as watercraft typically suitable or intended for personal use. Activities of shipyards include the construction of fabrication equipment capable of building a ship, defined as ships, their repair, conversion, and alteration, production of prefabricated ship and barge sections, and specialized services, such as ship scaling.
The gross regional product (GRP), also called regional gross domestic product (GDP), is the market value of all goods and services produced within a given area over a specific period and is a good measure of the size, income, and productivity of a regional economy (EMSI, 2021).