Michigan  |
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| With its incentives and tax credits, companies
are finding business-friendly Michigan
the ideal location to move onwards and upwards |
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Why should a British-based company locate operations
in Michigan? The fact that Michigan is surrounded by four of the five
Great Lakes will certainly help a British corporate family feel right
at home! But aside from the exceptional natural resources, and cultural
and recreational amenities, Michigan is attracting the attention of
UK-based companies for some very sound business reasons.
With incentives that make a real difference to the bottom line, a
highly skilled labour force, easy access to customers and suppliers,
excellent transportation links and world-class university and research
capability, Michigan offers the essentials that businesses need. According
to Site Selection magazine, Michigan has attracted more corporate
facilities and expansions over the past seven years than
any other US state. In fact, Michigan has gained over 2,000 such projects
more than California, our closest competitor. A business-friendly
climate that includes recent regulatory reforms, a streamlined permitting
process and revolutionary tax incentives make Michigan an ideal choice
for locating a growing business.
Our international partners apparently agree. The Great Lakes State
is home to more than 1,000 divisions, affiliates and subsidiaries
of international companies, including more than 60 that are UK-based.
On the investment side, Michigan cities are recognised as top magnets
for European business. Expansion Management magazine’s fifth
annual survey of European capital investment in the US
manufacturing sector ranked Michigan second. Nearly 30 European companies
have invested in the Detroit-Warren- Livonia metro area alone during
the past two years.
Of the Top 150 suppliers to North America identified by Automotive
News for 2003, 86 are located in Michigan. Outsourcing by the automakers
has opened up greater opportunities for Tier One and Two suppliers.
Michigan has also won the brains of the automotive industry. In the
past 30 months, Michigan has welcomed a new influx of automotive R&D,
testing, engineering facilities and expansions of companies that include
BorgWarner, Toyota, Hyundai, Nissan, Akebono and Saab.
A recent high-tech addition, characteristic of the increasing diversification
of the state’s economy, is the new laboratory complex for British-based
Smiths Aerospace in Grand Rapids. At this new facility, the company
is creating and testing advanced avionics equipment and components
for future US and British military aircraft. The British-owned aerospace
giant has its electronic systems headquarters
in Grand Rapids, but had considered expanding into a competing site
in Maryland. However, the Michigan Economic Development Corporation
(MEDC) offered Smiths a high-tech Single Business Tax credit worth
$2.1m over the next nine years to help convince the company to expand
locally.
Homeland security, along with life sciences and advanced automotive
technologies, is being targeted for growth through the Michigan Technology
Tri-Corridor initiative. The Tri-Corridor is Governor Granholm’s
plan for leveraging Michigan’s manufacturing and research capabilities
in these three high-tech, high-growth sectors. The state has gained
more than 100 new high-tech life sciences companies
over the past four years. It already has more than 1,000 companies
in advanced automotive technologies, and more than 100 pursuing development
of security technologies.
Michigan is noted for its innovative incentives, designed to attract
and grow companies here. The Michigan Economic Development Corporation
has the ability to offer tax-free Renaissance Zones, state tax abatement,
and credits and other incentives for new and growing companies. Michigan’s
brownfield redevelopment programme is recognised as one of the most
effective in the nation,
utilising brownfield tax credits to rehabilitate problem properties
into productive developments.
Thanks in part to tax credits worth more than half a million dollars,
UK-based Pilkington North America recently expanded its value-added
automotive glass manufacturing operations by moving production to
Lenawee County from Indiana. The company is one of more than 200 in
recent years that have chosen to locate to or expand in Michigan,
rather than competing sites elsewhere, as a result of the
state’s targeted tax credit incentives.
For exporting companies, the MEDC International Business Development
Unit’s efforts are targeted at companies of 500 employees or
less. This tends to be the size of company that does not have the
resources to support an international department or staff. Large or
small, the company that locates in Michigan is well positioned for
growth in domestic and world markets.
For more information, visit: www.michigan.org
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