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Economy of Chicago

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Chicago Board of Trade

Chicago and its suburbs, which together comprise the Chicago Metropolitan Area, is home to 35 Fortune 500 companies and is a transportation and distribution center. Manufacturing, printing, publishing, insurance, transportation, financial trading and services, and food processing also play major roles in the city's economy. The total economic output of Chicago in gross metropolitan product totaled US$770.7 billion in 2020,[1][2] surpassing the total economic output of Switzerland and making Chicago's gross metropolitan product (GMP) the third largest in the United States, after New York and Los Angeles. The city is home to several Fortune 500 companies, including Archer Daniels Midland, Conagra Brands, Exelon, JLL, Kraft Heinz, McDonald's, Mondelez International, Motorola Solutions, Sears, and United Airlines Holdings,[3] although Chicago has experienced an exodus of large corporations since 2020,[4] including Boeing; Citadel LLC; Caterpillar; and Tyson Foods.[5] Three Fortune 500 companies left Chicago in 2022, leaving the city with 35, still second to New York City.[6]

Real estate and corporate location

The 92-story Trump Tower Chicago, Lakeshore East development, and the 300 North Lasalle office building are projects completed after 2000. Since the Great Recession, other projects, like the planned 150-story 2000 foot Chicago Spire by architect Santiago Calatrava, have now been cancelled.[7] Many city neighborhoods are gentrifying at a rapid pace as well, including Humboldt Park, Logan Square, Pilsen, Uptown, Near Southside, and Rogers Park.[citation needed] The massive expansion of O'Hare International Airport and recently reconstructed[when?] Dan Ryan Expressway will shape development patterns for years to come.

Changes in house prices for the Chicago metropolitan area are publicly tracked on a regular basis using the Case–Shiller index; the statistic is published by Standard & Poor's and is also a component of S&P's 10-city composite index of the value of the residential real estate market.

Finance

Top publicly traded
companies in metro Chicago

according to revenues
with metro and U.S. rankings
Metro Corporation US
1 Walgreens Boots Alliance 17
3 Archer Daniels Midland 45
5 United Airlines 83
6 Allstate 84
7 Exelon 89
8 Mondelēz International 109
9 AbbVie 111
10 McDonald's 112
11 US Foods 124
12 Sears Holdings 127
13 Abbott Laboratories 135
14 Conagra Brands 197
15 CDW 199
16 Illinois Tool Works 202
17 Discover Financial 277
18 Baxter 281
19 WW Grainger 282
20 LKQ 304
21 Tenneco 322
22 International Motors 337
23 Univar 338
24 Anixter 359
25 RR Donnelley 388
26 JLL 391
27 Dover Corporation 392
28 Tree House Foods 427
29 Motorola Solutions 433
30 Old Republic International 439
31 Packaging Corporation of America 450
32 Ingredion 456
33 Arthur J. Gallagher 462
34 Essendant 487
Further information:
Companies in the Chicago area

Source: Fortune 500 2017[8]

The city houses one of the Federal Reserve Banks, established in 1914. There is also the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago. The largest banks in the Chicago region (by % of deposits) are: JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America (through its acquisition of LaSalle Bank), BMO Harris Bank (a BMO subsidiary), and Northern Trust. The largest banks headquartered in Chicago are: BMO Harris Bank, Northern Trust, Wintrust Financial, and First Midwest Bank. Many financial institutions are in the Loop.

Chicago has five major financial exchanges, including the Chicago Stock Exchange (CHX), the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), and NYSE Arca. While the city of Chicago houses most of the major brokerage firms in the area, some insurance companies are in the suburbs, such as Allstate Corporation.

In the 2020 Global Financial Centres Index, Chicago was ranked as having the 20th most competitive financial center in the world and sixth-most competitive in the United States (after New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston, and Washington, D.C.).[9]

Largest employers

According to Reboot Illinois,[10] the largest employers in the city of Chicago are:

# Employer Employees
1 U.S. Government 49,400
2 Chicago Public Schools 39,094
3 City of Chicago 30,340
4 Cook County, Illinois 21,482
5 Advocate Health System 18,512
6 JPMorgan Chase 16,045
7 University of Chicago 15,452
8 State of Illinois 14,731
9 United Continental Holdings 14,000
10 AT&T Illinois 14,000
11 Walgreens 13,657
12 Abbott Laboratories 12,000
13 Presence Health 11,959
14 Chicago Transit Authority 11,100
15 University of Illinois at Chicago 9,900
16 Northwestern Memorial Healthcare 9,614
17 American Airlines 9,600
18 Jewel-Osco 9,155
19 Northwestern University 9,121
20 Allstate 7,808
21 Aon 7,667
22 Rush University Medical Center 7,500
23 Archdiocese of Chicago 7,500
24 Walmart 7,260
25 Northern Trust Company 6,644

Historic highlights

Chicago Board of Trade

Before it was incorporated as a town in 1833, the primary industry was fur trading. In the 1790s, Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable, the area's first resident and Haitian-born fur trader, established a fur trading post in the area, which later became known as Fort Dearborn, along the bank of the Chicago River, where he traded until relocating again in 1800.[11]

The American Fur Company, established in 1808 by John Jacob Astor to compete with the powerful Canadian North West and Hudson Bay companies, practically took control of the fur trade in the United States following the War of 1812. It quickly became known for its ruthless practice of buying out or destroying the competition, as most private traders in Chicago soon found out. It appointed John Kinzie and Antoine Deschamps as its first agents in northern Illinois, and they reported to the company's headquarters on Mackinac Island. Their field of operations covered northeastern Illinois and the Illinois River. In 1819, Charles H. Beaubien was brought in to assist Kinzie and eventually became head of the outfit. Gurdon S. Hubbard replaced Deschamps in 1823 but soon went on his own by purchasing all interests of the company in Illinois.

Industrialization

Late in the 19th century, Chicago was part of the bicycle craze, as home to Western Wheel Company, which introduced stamping to the production process and significantly reduced costs,[12] while early in the 20th century, the city was part of the automobile revolution, hosting the brass era car builder Bugmobile, which was founded there in 1907.[13]

It was also home to Grigsby-Grunow, which manufactured radios under the Majestic brand until the company failed in 1934.[14] (Majestic Radio and Television Corporation preserved the Majestic name, while General Household Utilities kept Grunow alive.)[15] Chicago also hosted E. H. Scott's Scott Transformer Company, which introduced a high-grade radio in 1928, and grew into Scott Radio Laboratories;[16] this was located at 4450 Ravenswood Avenue in 1946,[16] and produced "very expensive, beautifully-designed, chrome-plated chassis".[17] It added "a line of high-quality television sets in 1949".[18] Other entrants in this business were Zenith, which started life there in 1918, entering auto radios in the 1930s,[19] and Galvin Manufacturing Corporation, which started manufacturing power supplies in 1928 and went on to automobile radios under the Motorola marque in 1930,[20] as well as Walkie-talkie and Handie-Talkie and for the Army.[20]

During World War II, the steel mills in the city of Chicago alone accounted for 20% of all steel production in the United States and 10% of global production. The city produced more steel than the United Kingdom during the war, and surpassed Nazi Germany's output in 1943 (after barely missing in 1942). Some mills were located on the branches of the Chicago River emanating from the downtown area, but the largest mills were located along the Calumet River and Lake Calumet in the far south of the city. Over 200,000 people were employed in the steel industry at its peak in the 1950s and 1960s, but mass layoffs in the 1970s and 1980s devastated many working class south side neighborhoods that were heavily dependent on industrial jobs. Downsizing and plant closures continued into the 1990s and 2000s, and the US Dept of Commerce estimates that today fewer than 25,000 people are employed in the steel industry in the Chicago–Joliet–Naperville, IL–IN–WI Metropolitan Statistical Area (18,000 of whom are actually in Northwest Indiana.

In 1945, US Steel was Chicago's largest single employer, with 18,000 workers at the company's South Works.[21]

Massive amounts of goods passed through Chicago from places in the Mississippi Valley such as St. Louis, Missouri. Grain was stored in Chicago, and people began buying contracts on it. Later, people as far away as New York City began buying contracts by telegraph on the goods that would be stored in Chicago in the future. From this were established the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), and the modern systems in use today for futures and commodity trading.

Notable people

Chicago has produced many of the foremost industrialists, corporate lawyers, merchants, and financiers in United States history. Among the foremost of the Chicago industrialists, lawyers, financiers, and merchants were John Villiers Farwell, Edmund Dick Taylor, Potter Palmer, George Pullman, Charles Gray, Marshall Field, Richard Teller Crane, Martin Ryerson, John Jacob Glessner, Jacob Bunn, John Whitfield Bunn, John Graves Shedd, Cyrus Hall McCormick, Edward Avery Shedd, Charles Banks Shedd, Leander McCormick, Stanley Field, Charles Deering, James Deering, Robert Law, Francis Peabody, Leonard Richardson, Milo Barnum Richardson, Joseph Edward Otis, Frank Hatch Jones, Arthur Jerome Eddy, Arthur J. Caton, Nathaniel Kellogg Fairbank, Ezra Butler McCagg, Julius Rosenwald, Morris Selz, Harry Selz, William McCormick Blair, William Douglas Richardson, Charles Farwell, James Monroe Stryker and Jon Stryker of the Bunn–Richardson–Stryker–Taylor family (See: John Whitfield Bunn and Jacob Bunn), Samuel Insull, Max Adler, Lucius Fisher, Lucius Teeter, John Peter Altgeld, Walter Gurnee, Philip Danforth Armour, Gustavus Franklin Swift, Michael Morris, Jacob Best, Jonathan Y. Scammon, and many others.

See also

References

  1. ^ "U.S. metro areas - ranked by Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP) 2020". Statista. 2021-01-20. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  2. ^ "Forecasted Gross Metropolitan Product GMP of the United States in 2020, by metropolitan Area". {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  3. ^ "Chicago's 50 Largest Publicly Traded Companies" (PDF). Loyola University Chicago. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Tyson Foods latest large business to flee Chicago, what sparked the exodus? | Fox Business". www.foxbusiness.com. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  5. ^ Jordan Valensky, CNN Business (October 6, 2022). "Big Companies Keep Leaving Chicago: What's Going On?". WRAL News. Retrieved November 5, 2022. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ Dylan Sharkey (October 17, 2022). "Chicago's Fortune 500 headquarters are shrinking". Illinois Policy. Retrieved November 9, 2022. Chicago has lost three Fortune 500 headquarters in 2022.
  7. ^ "Death knell for Chicago Spire as receiver appointed". The Boston Irish Emigrant. 2010. Retrieved January 15, 2011.
  8. ^ "Fortune 500 2017: Full List". Fortune. CNNMoney.
  9. ^ "The Global Financial Centres Index 28" (PDF). Long Finance. September 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  10. ^ "Chicago employers that provide the most jobs". www.rebootillinois.com. Archived from the original on 2014-05-31.
  11. ^ DuSable Heritage Association
  12. ^ Norcliffe, Glen. The Ride to Modernity: The Bicycle in Canada, 1869-1900 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001), p.107.
  13. ^ Clymer, Floyd. Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877-1925 (New York: Bonanza Books, 1950), p.178.
  14. ^ Mahon, Morgan E. A Flick of the Switch 1930–1950 (Antiques Electronics Supply, 1990), p.107.
  15. ^ Mahon, p.107.
  16. ^ a b Mahon, p.167.
  17. ^ Mahon, p.169.
  18. ^ Scott himself quit in 1945. Mahon, p.167.
  19. ^ Mahon, p.189.
  20. ^ a b Mahon, p.110.
  21. ^ Frum, David (2000). How We Got Here: The '70s. New York, New York: Basic Books. p. 22. ISBN 0-465-04195-7.