Bluford Library Receives LSTA Grant to Lower Class Costs, Boost OER Use
08/02/2023 in Library
EAST GREENSBORO, N.C. (Aug. 19, 2020) – As North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University opens the 2020-21 school year today, school leaders have released the results of a new analysis that reveals a statewide economic impact of nearly $1.5 billion.
Drawn from 2017-18 data, the impact is $500 million more than when last measured using 2012-13 numbers, owing to North Carolina A&T’s growth in enrollment, workforce, spending and construction.
While the $1.5-billion impact is mostly concentrated in Guilford County and the Piedmont Triad, it reaches across all of North Carolina. A&T, for instance, has Agricultural Extension offices in half of the state’s counties, online undergraduate and graduate programs that serve learners across North Carolina and draws students from 75 counties. Its research and development efforts serve businesses and organizations across the state, and as America’s largest historically black university now for the seventh consecutive year, its faculty often tackle problems and issues of major concern to North Carolina’s African American community.
“As a public, land grant university, we have a special obligation to the people of this state, and this new analysis details the significance of our efforts in fulfilling that expectation,” said Chancellor Harold L. Martin Sr. “As part of the $1.5 billion impact, for instance, we’re responsible for nearly 12,000 jobs and $70 million in state and local taxes. That makes A&T not only an outstanding research university, but a strong economic catalyst for Guilford County, the Piedmont Triad and the state of North Carolina.”
Other highlights from the analysis, which was conducted by A&T faculty Alfredo A. Romero Aguirre, Ph.D., associate professor of economics, and Cephas Naanwaab, Ph.D., assistant professor of economics, include:
Additional detail from the economic impact analysis is available here.
Media Contact Information: thsimmons@ncat.edu