Colorado's role in our national defense.

AuthorBinnings, Tom
PositionTHE ECONOMIST - DoD-Colorado military relationships

WHAT I ENJOY MOST ABOUT BEING AN Applied economist is the opportunity to constantly learn. My company, Summit Economics, recently spent six months working with WBB, a Department of Defense (DoD) consultant in Virginia, and the State of Colorado, on an illuminating project. The project addressed the value of Colorado to the DoD and the reciprocal relationship. This was achieved given the long-term outlook for federal austerity and the possibility of a new Base Closure and Realignment Commission (BRAC) process in the coming years as the DoD and Congress attempt to realign the nation's military assets and capabilities to increase effectiveness and efficiency.

Colorado is the operational missile defense center for the world. From command activities in Aurora to tracking and integration in Colorado Springs, to rapid deployment of reserves in Greeley, our state sits at the nexus of missile defense. When combined with satellite operations that are increasingly encountering space congestion as more nations launch satellites, the Front Range has one of the highest concentrations of aerospace in the nation. Of course, the state is known for high-altitude training for combat among ground troops and aviation as well.

A critical aspect of considering the DoD-Colorado relationship is the degree of product or technological diversity. If all one has is a specific product (in this case military capability) or technology, then the local economy is vulnerable to change as the "product" matures through its life cycle. On the mature and declining end of the scale is ground based force-on-force combat, manned aerial combat, and the old space paradigm where the U.S. dominated with satellites. Fortunately, Colorado also hosts special ops and rapid response --intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance--cyber security, and unmanned aerial vehicles.

What makes a diversified DoD presence possible in Colorado are the economies of agglomeration that have developed in the state since World War II. Agglomeration is a self-reinforcing process where an industry grows in...

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