Upstate slected for Global Cities Initiative’s New Exchange Network

November 25, 2013

GREENVILLE, SC – November 25, 2013 – The Upstate region of South Carolina, representing the Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, S.C. Combined Statistical Area, is joining a new exchange network created by the Global Cities Initiative, a joint project of Brookings and JPMorgan Chase.  The Global Cities Exchange is a network of metropolitan areas committed to establishing actionable plans that will promote greater global trade and economic competitiveness.  

Brookings selected metropolitan areas to join the network after an extensive application process that evaluated regions’ readiness and capability to pursue the Exchange’s curriculum and commitment to fulfill its goals.The network will expand over time to include additional U.S. and international cities working together to strengthen their local economies through increased engagement with the rest of the world.  This builds on the Global Cities Initiative’s work, which equips metropolitan leaders with the information, policy ideas, and global connections they need to bolster their regions’ positions in the global economy.   

For the Exchange, we selected metro areas that are committed to expanding their global economic reach by working together to identify regional competitive strengths and increase exports, said Brad McDearman, Brookings fellow.  The eight metro areas selected for this round represent a growing group of U.S. metro areas that understand the need to embrace the global market to remain competitive in the 21st century economy.

With rapid urbanization in maturing markets creating a new consumer class and 85 percent of global GDP growth projected to occur outside the U.S. between 2013 and 2018, now is a great time for U.S. firms and local economies to achieve economic growth by capitalizing on their distinctive assets and expand their global trade and investment strategies.

As a part of the booming I-85 business belt that connects Charlotte with Atlanta, it’s fitting that Upstate South Carolina will be a part of this new network – it’s exactly the kind of innovative planning that is needed to ensure the region’s long-term economic success, said Jason Lloyd, relationship executivefor JPMorgan Chase in the Carolinas. We have a long history of helping businesses connect to global markets and now the Exchange brings additional resources to help the region’s leaders design strategies to further create jobs and grow our economy through greater global engagement.

The Upstate region’s leadership is uniquely positioned to make exports and global engagement a central, consistent part of broader regional economic strategies. Regional economic development leaders representing both the public and private sectors can help local firms access new markets and align existing export services because they know their regions best. They are also best equipped to coordinate regional assets-such as skills training, innovation capacities, and freight and logistics-to better support global trade. Upstate, S.C. will join Atlanta; Indianapolis; Jacksonville, Fla.; Milwaukee; Phoenix; Sacramento, Calif.; and Wichita, Kan., in the Exchange’s inaugural class, which will work together over the next four years to establish new metro-to-metro relationships and to share best practices in global economic development.  

The Upstate will be represented in the Exchange by a team of leaders being convened by the Upstate SC Alliance.  Max Metcalf, manager of government & community relations at BWM Manufacturing Co.; Dave Edwards, president and CEO of the GSP International Airport; Jack Ellenberg, senior vice president, economic development & projects at South Carolina Ports; along with many others involved with export and trade have committed to the project.

This is an exciting development. Upstate leadership has been so proactive in planning for the region’s success. Along with the inland port in Greer just opening, being an inaugural member of the Exchange will increase the region’s global competitiveness, said Greer mayor Rick Danner, also on the project team.

As part of the Exchange, the Upstate region will first develop a regional export plan and later integrate a foreign direct investment strategy. Together these plans, which may also grow to include logistics and advanced industries, will comprise a customized global engagement strategy to strengthen the region’s global economic connections and competitiveness.

Leaders of the Upstate’s Exchange team will join those of the other accepted metropolitan areas at Brookings in Washington, D.C., in December to participate in their first working group session, where they will learn how to develop an export plan as part of a global economic development strategy. Throughout the four-year Exchange, participating metros will periodically convene for in-person working groups and will continually engage in curriculum via conference calls and webinars.

The inaugural cohort of eight metropolitan areas will join twelve that are already involved in Brookings-led metropolitan export planning. Charleston, S.C.; Chicago; Columbus, Ohio; Des Moines, Iowa; Los Angeles; Louisville-Lexington, Ky.; Minneapolis-Saint Paul; Portland, Ore.; San Antonio; San Diego; Syracuse, N.Y.; and Tampa Bay, Fla., are all existing members of the Brookings Metropolitan Export Initiative and have been invited to continue their work as part of the Global Cities Exchange.

In addition to these 20 metro areas, the Global Cities Initiative will support strategic economic engagements in select international markets. Last week in México City, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and México City Mayor Miguel ÁngelMancera announced the first international engagement of the Exchange by signing an agreement to formalize and strengthen their cities’ economic partnership.   The two cities will work together to expand exports, foreign investment, skilled workforce and research endeavors.

Launched in 2012, the Global Cities Initiative is a five-year joint project of Brookings and JPMorgan Chase aimed at helping city and metropolitan leaders become more globally fluent by providing an in-depth and data-driven look at their regional standing on crucial global economic measures, highlighting best policy and practice innovations from around the world, and creating an international network of leaders who ultimately trade and grow together. For more information please visit http://www.brookings.edu/projects/global-cities.aspx or www.jpmorganchase.com/globalcities.

The Upstate SC Alliance is a public/private regional economic development organization designed to market and brand the Upstate of South Carolina. The Upstate represents the commerce-rich northwestern corner of South Carolina, including the I-85 corridor and the Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson combined statistical area. Additional information is available through the Alliance’s website, www.upstateSCalliance.com.