Vol. 22 No. 2, February 2002
Index
- Getting away.
- Trend.
- Faindango: Jim Fain thinks commerce can do the fancy footwork to balance the needs of the new economy and the old.
- The pinehurst experience: Convenience and a rich tradition blend to create a meeting site like no other in the world.
- Can't buy me love: Tax breaks and other financial incentives attract jobs, but that doesn't mean places that get them keep them.
- Size doesn't count: Though employment statewide moved up slightly, jobs in the state's 100 largest employers shrank 4.4%.
- New ways don't solve old woes for farmers.
- Wachovia battle vaults banks into a new realm.
- Builders try to nail down anything that is going up.
- Manufacturers get hit hard on the home front.
- 'What does not kill me only makes me stronger'.
- Companies jettison jobs as blush fades from boom.
- Attacks spread terror among premium payers.
- Despite ailing economy, biotechs remain healthy.
- Retailers manage to hoist their sales.
- Jobs spill from ill mills and the spin they're in.
- Terror and recession slam industry's brakes.
- Hospitality looks inward in aftermath of Sept. 11.
- Consider the source: N.C. as global power.
- Sharing the pain: No region is a refuge as layoffs spread across the state, taking their toll of both high-tech and low-skill jobs.
- Advantagewest.
- Charlotte regional partnership.
- Piedmont triad partnership.
- Research triangle regional partnership.
- Southeast.
- Eastern region.
- Northeast partnership.
- County accounting: Here's a paint-by-numbers economic portrait of each of the state's 100 counties.
- North Carolina's largest cities.