Economy of Paris

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by EnWikinombre (talk | contribs) at 21:38, 23 March 2008 (→‎Fortune Global 500 companies: Total Rank is more information than local rank.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Paris as an engine of the global economy: the skyscrapers of La Défense (in the background), the largest purpose-built business district of Europe, with 3.35 million m² (36 million sq. ft) of office space.[1]

Paris is one of the engines of the global economy. In 2006 the GDP of the Paris Region as calculated by INSEE was US$628.9 billion at current exchange rates.[2] If it were a country, the Paris Region would be the 17th largest economy in the world (as of 2006), with an economy nearly as large as that of the Netherlands.[3]

Although in terms of population the urban area of Paris is only approximately the 20th largest urban area in the world, its GDP is the fifth-largest in the world after the urban areas of Tokyo, New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago.[4]

The Paris economy is extremely diverse and has not yet adopted a specialisation inside the global economy (unlike Los Angeles with the entertainment industry, or London and New York with financial services). Today it is essentially a service economy, with business and financial services generating nearly half of the Paris Region's GDP.[5] Its manufacturing base has declined since its pre-1970s heyday, generating now less than 10% of the region's GDP,[5] even though the Paris Region still remains one of the manufacturing powerhouses of Europe due to the sheer size of its economy, with a shift from traditional to high-tech manufacturing.

Paris GDP

Economically speaking, the agglomeration of Paris is among the largest economic centres in the world, with the fifth-largest gross metropolitan product in the world in 2005 according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers whose main results are shown in the table below.[4]

Urban agglomerations 2005 GDP
(in billion US$)
(at purchasing power parity)

01- Tokyo

1,191

02- New York

1,133

03- Los Angeles

639

04- Chicago

460

05- Paris

460

06- London

452

07- Osaka-Kobe

341

08- Mexico City

315

09- Philadelphia

312

10- Washington

299

Year in, year out, the Paris Region accounts for 28 to 29% of the total GDP of metropolitan France, although its 2006 population is only 18.8% of the total population of metropolitan France. According to Eurostat, the GDP of the Paris Region accounted alone for 4.4% of the total GDP of the European Union (of 27 members) in the year 2005,[6] although its population is only 2.3% of the total population of the EU27.

Fortune Global 500 companies

The City of Paris hosts the world headquarters of twenty-six Fortune Global 500 companies (the 500 largest corporations in the world by revenue, ranked every year by Fortune magazine) with a combined revenue of 1,241 billion US dollars in the fiscal year 2006-2007. This is more Fortune Global 500 companies and a larger combined revenue than any city in the world except Tokyo as shown in the table below.[7]

Rank City Country Number of Global 500
companies
Global 500
revenues ($ millions, FY 06-07)
1 Tokyo Japan 50 1,725,362
2 Paris France 26 1,240,919
3 New York United States 22 1,174,439
3 London United Kingdom 22 1,085,187
4 Beijing China 18 711,186
5 Seoul South Korea 10 412,535
6 Toronto Canada 9 201,394
7 Madrid Spain 8 294,314
8 Zürich Switzerland 7 352,830
8 Houston United States 7 352,201
9 Munich Germany 6 390,017
9 Osaka Japan 6 180,901
10 Rome Italy 5 235,231
10 Atlanta United States 5 199,447


Ten Fortune Global 500 companies are also headquartered in the inner and outer suburbs of Paris, notably in the business district of La Défense, thus giving a total of thirty-six Fortune Global 500 companies whose world headquartered are located within the Paris Region. Here is a list of these thirty-six companies:

Fortune Global 500 companies headquartered in the Paris Region (in 2007)[8]
Rank Company name Industry Revenues ($ millions, FY 06-07) Location
10 Total Petroleum Refining 168,356.7 La Défense
15 AXA Insurance: Life, Health (stock) 139,738.1 8th arrondissement
18 Crédit Agricole Banks: Commercial and Savings 128,481.3 15th arrondissement
25 BNP Paribas Banks: Commercial and Savings 109,213.6 9th arrondissement
32 Carrefour Food and Drug Stores 99,014.7 Levallois-Perret
49 Société Générale Banks: Commercial and Savings 84,485.7 9th arrondissement
63 EDF Utilities (electricity) 73,939.1 8th arrondissement
68 Peugeot Motor vehicles and Parts 71,005.7 16th arrondissement
82 France Télécom Telecommunications 65,899.3 15th arrondissement
105 Suez Energy 56,721.3 8th arrondissement
108 CNP Assurances Insurance: Life, Health (stock) 55,583.8 15th arrondissement
116 Saint-Gobain Building materials, Glass 52,188.5 La Défense
117 Renault Motor vehicles and Parts 52,103.2 Boulogne-Billancourt
153 Groupe Caisse d'Epargne Banks: Commercial and Savings 41,015.8 13th arrondissement
169 Sanofi-Aventis Pharmaceuticals 36,998.4 13th arrondissement
178 Veolia Environnement Utilities 36,044.4 16th arrondissement
189 GDF Utilities (natural gas) 34,681.1 17th arrondissement
193 Bouygues Engineering, Construction 33,693.7 8th arrondissement
197 Vinci Engineering, Construction 32,681.5 Rueil-Malmaison
204 Foncière Euris General Merchandisers, Commercial Real Estate 32,237.0 8th arrondissement
222 Air France-KLM Airlines 29,592.1 Paris CDG Airport
223 La Poste Mail, Package, Freight Delivery 29,466.7 15th arrondissement
242 SNCF Railroads 27,444.2 14th arrondissement
270 Vivendi Telecommunications, Entertainment 25,148.2 8th arrondissement
295 Lafarge Building materials, Glass 23,252.5 16th arrondissement
296 PPR General Merchandisers (luxury goods) 23,191.6 16th arrondissement
316 Groupama Insurance: P&C (mutual) 22,442.0 8th arrondissement
351 Christian Dior Apparel 20,094.5 8th arrondissement
353 L'Oréal Household and Personal Products 19,811.1 Clichy
383 Alstom Industrial Equipment (power generation, trains) 18,754.0 Levallois-Perret
395 Lagardère Group Media, Publishing, Aerospace 18,187.4 16th arrondissement
401 Alcatel-Lucent Network and Other Communications Equipment 18,043.1 8th arrondissement
412 Groupe Danone Food Consumer Products 17,656.7 9th arrondissement
426 Schneider Electric Electronics, Electrical Equipment 17,226.0 Rueil-Malmaison
461 CIC Banks: Commercial and Savings 16,254.0 9th arrondissement
483 Sodexo Food Services 15,683.0 Montigny-le-Bretonneux
Note: The Franco-German aerospace company EADS has its dual world headquarters in Paris and Munich but it is not listed here because
Fortune magazine considered it was located in the Netherlands, which is the place where EADS was legally incorporated for tax reasons.

Spatial organisation of the Paris economy

As of the 1999 census, there were 5,089,179 persons employed in the Paris aire urbaine (or "metropolitan area").[9] At the same 1999 census, 4,949,306 people living in the Paris aire urbaine had a job.[10] The almost 140,000 people difference between these two figures comes from an outflow of about 60,000 people living inside the aire urbaine who work outside of it, and an inflow of about 200,000 people living outside of the aire urbaine who come to work inside it every day. Thus, out of the 5,089,179 people employed in the Paris aire urbaine in 1999, only about 200,000 people (3.9% of the total) lived outside of it, which is not surprising since the boundaries of the aires urbaines are based on commuting patterns.

Well into the middle of the 20th century, the majority of jobs in the aire urbaine were concentrated in the city of Paris proper. However, after the Second World War the economic activity relocated to the suburbs, and the city has been steadily losing jobs to the benefit of the suburbs, in particular the Hauts-de-Seine (92) département, home of the new La Défense business district, to the west of the city proper. Today, the city of Paris is not properly speaking the economic centre of the aire urbaine since most of the offices are in fact located in the western half of the city proper and in the central portion of the Hauts-de-Seine département, forming a triangle between the Opéra, La Défense and the Val de Seine district. Hauts-de-Seine has become a sort of extension of central Paris, with 873,775 persons employed there in the end of 2005, more than half as many as in the city of Paris proper (1,653,551 persons employed in the city of Paris in the end of 2005).[11]

As a consequence workers do not just commute from the suburbs to work in the city of Paris, but also come from the city of Paris to work in the suburbs. Of the 5,416,643 persons employed in the Paris Region in the end of 2005, only 1,653,551 (30.5%) worked inside the city of Paris proper, while 3,763,092 (69.5%) worked in the suburbs. However, once adding Hauts-de-Seine, the previous figures show that City of Paris and Hauts-de-Seine together still harboured 46.7% of all persons employed in the Paris Region in the end of 2005, which should help to put into perspective the phenomenon of job relocation to the suburbs: it was as much a relocation to the suburbs as an extension of central Paris beyond the administrative borders of the city.

During the 1960s and 1970s, the French government created several villes nouvelles ("new towns") on the outer ring of the Paris suburbs in order to multi-polarise the economy of the city. Economically speaking, those villes nouvelles have been a relative success since many companies are still moving into those areas today. However, they didn't completely fulfil their role of multi-polarisation: economic activities still remain in a large measure concentrated in the central core (City of Paris and Hauts-de-Seine) of the aire urbaine, as the above employment figures show.

Sectors of the Paris economy

The figures below, extracted from the 1999 census,[12] show the distribution of the 5,089,179 persons employed in the Paris aire urbaine across the different economic sectors in the year 1999. This will give a sense of the extreme diversity of the Paris economy, marked nonetheless by the notable dominance of services.

  • Primary sector: Agriculture, forestry, and fishing: 26,741 persons in employment (0.5% of total workforce)
  • Secondary sector: Manufacturing and mining, construction, and utilities: 913,503 p. in emp. (17.9% of t. wf)
    • Manufacturing (includes mining and oil and gas extraction): 627,534 p. in emp. (12.3 % of t. wf)
      The manufacturing industries employing most people are:
      • Electronic and electrical equipment, appliances, and components: 112,281 p. in emp. (2.2% of t. wf)
        This branch is made of: computers and peripheral equipment; mobile phones; radio and television broadcasting and wireless communications equipment; semiconductors and other electronic components; navigational, measuring, electro-medical, and control instruments; electrical engines; electric lighting equipment; miscellaneous electrical equipment (cables, transformers, switchboards, etc.). This branch DOES NOT include household electronic and electrical appliances (televisions, radios, DVD players, ovens, refrigerators, watches, clocks, etc.).
      • Publishing, printing, and reproduction of recorded media: 87,599 p. in emp. (1.7% of t. wf)
        Books, newspapers, magazines, etc. This branch DOES NOT include the motion picture and sound recording industries, neither does it include the broadcasting industries.
      • Foodstuff, beverages, and tobacco products manufacturing: 59,862 p. in emp. (1.2% of t. wf)
      • Machinery and equipment manufacturing: 56,270 p. in emp. (1.1% of t. wf)
        This branch is made of: engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment; pumps and compressors; material handling equipment; ventilation, heating, air-conditioning, and commercial refrigeration equipment; agriculture, construction, and mining machinery; machine tools; industrial moulds; industrial machinery (plastics and rubber industry machinery, textile machinery, etc.); and other general purpose machinery (welding and soldering equipment, industrial process furnaces and ovens, scales and balances (except laboratory), etc.). This branch DOES ALSO INCLUDE three industries generally listed under "Fabricated metal products manufacturing" in Anglo-Saxon classifications: architectural and structural metals manufacturing; boilers, tanks, and shipping containers; and arms and ammunitions.
      • Motor vehicles, trailers, and motor vehicle parts manufacturing ("car industry"): 52,149 p. in emp. (1.0% of t. wf)
    • Construction: 235,872 p. in emp. (4.6% of t. wf)
    • Utilities: Electricity, natural gas and water supply: 50,097 p. in emp. (1.0% of t. wf)
  • Tertiary sector: Services: 4,148,935 p. in emp. (81.6% of t. wf)
    The services employing most people are:
    • Business services (include rental and leasing services): 841,157 p. in emp. (16.5% of t. wf)
      • Professional and technical services: 509,048 p. in emp. (10.0% of t. wf)
        This branch is made of: computer systems design and related services; data processing, hosting, and related services; software publishing; legal services; accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services; management of companies and enterprises; administrative management and general management consulting; human resources and executive search consulting; marketing consulting; process, physical distribution, and logistics consulting; environmental consulting; advertising and related services; and architectural, engineering, and related services.
      • Administrative, support, and waste management services: 272,981 p. in emp. (5.4% of t. wf)
        This branch is made of: employment services (placement, temporary); investigation and security services; services to buildings and dwellings; photographic services; office administrative services; translation and interpretation services; business support services (call centres, collection agencies, etc.); packaging and labelling services; convention and trade show organisers; and waste management and remediation services. This branch DOES ALSO INCLUDE renting and leasing of machinery and equipment without operator and of personal and household goods, which is generally listed along with "Real estate" in Anglo-Saxon classifications.
      • Research and development: 59,128 p. in emp. (1.1% of t. wf)
    • Commerce: 660,843 p. in emp. (13.0% of t. wf)
      • Retail trade (except of motor vehicles) and repair: 308,323 p. in emp. (6.1% of t. wf)
      • Wholesale and commission trade (except of motor vehicles): 276,282 p. in emp. (5.4% of t. wf)
      • Sale, maintenance, and repair of motor vehicles: 76,238 p. in emp. (1.5% of t. wf)
    • Public administrations and defense: 510,972 p. in emp. (10.0% of t. wf)
    • Health services and social assistance: 451,373 p. in emp. (8.7% of t. wf)
    • Transportation, storage, and communications: 419,779 p. in emp. (8.2% of t. wf)
      This branch is made of: public and private transportation of passengers and freight; warehousing and storage; travel agencies; post and couriers; and telecommunications.
    • Education: 334,852 p. in emp. (6.6% of t. wf)
    • Finance and insurance: 256,722 p. in emp. (5.0% of t. wf)
    • Accommodation and food services (hotels and restaurants): 202,228 p. in emp. (4.0% of t. wf)

Manufacturing

Business services

Commerce and finance

References

  1. ^ Template:Fr icon Paris Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Contribution des CCI de Paris - Ile-de-France à la révision du SDRIF, page 110. "TEM Paris – La Défense – QCA" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-09-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Template:Fr icon INSEE, Government of France. "Produits Intérieurs Bruts Régionaux (PIBR) en valeur en millions d'euros" (XLS). Retrieved 2007-09-01. {{cite web}}: Check |first= value (help)
    €500,839 million according to the INSEE Excel table, i.e. US$628.9 billion at current exchange rates, using the 2006 euro/dollar exchange rate used by the IMF.
  3. ^ World Bank. "Total GDP 2006" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-09-01.
  4. ^ a b PriceWaterhouseCoopers, "UK Economic Outlook, March 2007", page 5. ""Table 1.2 – Top 30 urban agglomeration GDP rankings in 2005 and illustrative projections to 2020 (using UN definitions and population estimates)"" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-03-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b Regional Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Paris - Île-de-France, "Paris region : Key Figures 2007", page 16. "Value added by sector" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-09-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Eurostat (12 February 2008). "Regional GDP in the European Union, 2005" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  7. ^ Fortune magazine (July 23, 2007). "Fortune Global 500 - Top cities". Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  8. ^ Fortune magazine (July 23, 2007). "Fortune Global 500 - France". Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  9. ^ Template:Fr icon INSEE, Government of France. "1999 French census, Total employment at workplace by gender, age, and employment status in the aire urbaine of Paris". Retrieved 2007-09-01. {{cite web}}: Check |first= value (help)
  10. ^ Template:Fr icon INSEE, Government of France. "1999 French census, Economically active population by gender, age, and activity status in the aire urbaine of Paris". Retrieved 2007-09-01. {{cite web}}: Check |first= value (help)
  11. ^ Template:Fr icon INSEE Ile-de-France, Government of France. "Estimations d'emploi salarié et non salarié par secteur d'activité et par département au 31 décembre". Retrieved 2007-09-01. {{cite web}}: Check |first= value (help)
  12. ^ Template:Fr icon INSEE, Government of France. "1999 French census, Total employment at workplace by gender, employment status, and economic sector in the aire urbaine of Paris". Retrieved 2007-09-01. {{cite web}}: Check |first= value (help)

External links