Best Places for Business and Careers 2019

Little Rock, AR

Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR
the place image

Little Rock, AR

Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR
gross metro product
$37B
population
741.1K
median household income
$53,331
median home price
$149,000
cost of living
6% below nat'l avg
college attainment
31.1%
net migration
380 (year: 2018)
unemployment
3.3%
major industries
Agriculture, Aviation, Health care
job growth
0.8% (year: 2018)
As of October 2019
Little Rock operated under a city manager form of government until 2007 when voters elected to convert the city to a strong-mayor form of government, making the mayor's position a full-time position with veto power. Major corporations headquartered in Little Rock include�Dillard's Department Stores, Windstream Communications�and�Acxiom. One of the largest public employers in the state with over more than 10,000 employees is the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and its affiliates, which have a total economic
impact in Arkansas of about $5 billion per year. The Little Rock port is an intermodal river port with a large industrial business complex. Consequently, international corporations such as LM Wind Power have established new facilities adjacent to the port in recent years.
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On forbes lists
#87
In Cost of Doing Business
#153
In Job Growth
#101
In Education
By The Numbers
EmploymentHousingEducationQuality of Life
Job Growth
0.8% (year: 2018)
Projected Annual Job Growth
0.4%
Unemployment
3.3%
Median Household Income
$53,331
Household Income Growth
2.1%
High-Tech Employment
1.8%
  • Data is for the metro area
  • Sources: Moody's Analytics; Sperling's BestPlaces; U.S. Census.
  • Numbers as of October 2019


  • a - Value of 100 means that a family with the median income has exactly enough income to qualify for a typical mortgage on a median-priced single-family home. An index above 100 signifies that the family has surplus income.
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The Rock And The Hard Place

The Federal Reserve remains lodged, unintentionally to be sure, between a rock and a hard spot. In financial terms, it is nearly precisely stuck in the middle between its dual mandate of stable prices about 2% (inflation) and full employment.