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Our articles on administrative subdivisions of the United States, and particularly on cities and metropolitan areas, lack useful descriptions of their economic structure. With a few exceptions, they offer little information on regional economies beyond anecdotal mentions of companies headquartered there. I would like to write brief sketches of the economic structures of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas (starting with the largest by population and working down the list in order of population size as my time permits). To do so, I would use publicly available data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis to perform the arithmetic calculations described in our article on economic base analysis. I would not draw any conclusions beyond those directly indicated by the data (for example, that the manufacturing sector of a given metropolitan area is larger than the U.S. average). I checked the detailed description of the policy of No Original Research because I was concerned that others might object to this information on those grounds. But the policy seems to allow arithmetic calculations using clearly sourced data. I want to see if others agree that this would be an acceptable way to strengthen our coverage of regional economies. So my proposal is to provide simple economic base analyses of U.S. metropolitan areas. Forgive me if my presentation departs from the norms here. I've been an infrequent editor for years and am not familiar with these norms. I appreciate your contribution to the consensus on my proposal. Marco polo ( talk) 17:43, 18 September 2023 (UTC)
This page contains discussions that have been archived from Village pump (proposals). Please do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to revive any of these discussions, either start a new thread or use the talk page associated with that topic.
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Our articles on administrative subdivisions of the United States, and particularly on cities and metropolitan areas, lack useful descriptions of their economic structure. With a few exceptions, they offer little information on regional economies beyond anecdotal mentions of companies headquartered there. I would like to write brief sketches of the economic structures of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas (starting with the largest by population and working down the list in order of population size as my time permits). To do so, I would use publicly available data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis to perform the arithmetic calculations described in our article on economic base analysis. I would not draw any conclusions beyond those directly indicated by the data (for example, that the manufacturing sector of a given metropolitan area is larger than the U.S. average). I checked the detailed description of the policy of No Original Research because I was concerned that others might object to this information on those grounds. But the policy seems to allow arithmetic calculations using clearly sourced data. I want to see if others agree that this would be an acceptable way to strengthen our coverage of regional economies. So my proposal is to provide simple economic base analyses of U.S. metropolitan areas. Forgive me if my presentation departs from the norms here. I've been an infrequent editor for years and am not familiar with these norms. I appreciate your contribution to the consensus on my proposal. Marco polo ( talk) 17:43, 18 September 2023 (UTC)