Georgia can consider initiatives focused on improving access and affordability, such as an increased emphasis on preventive care, more support for healthcare infrastructure—including the healthcare workforce—and continuing to experiment with new models of care in rural areas. Such efforts could reduce the disease burden by up to a third by 2030 and grow Georgia’s workforce by 7 percent.
Education to prepare the future workforce
Georgia has significant assets in its higher education ecosystem, with nationally ranked public universities and an affordable technical college system.6 Two institutions in the University System of Georgia (USG) are among the top 20 public universities in the United States,7 and 99 percent of graduates from the Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG) find jobs in their desired fields or continue their education.8
Despite the quality of their offerings, Georgia’s public institutions of higher education contend with the nationwide challenge of sluggish enrollment, and their graduates alone are insufficient to close the state's workforce gap. Georgia can help USG and TSCG capitalize on recent success with part-time, flexible, and adult-learning programs and find ways to keep a higher share of Georgia graduates from leaving the state.
Perhaps a bigger challenge concerns students in the K–12 system—Georgia’s future workforce. Student outcomes across Georgia have been stagnant for decades, and achievement gaps persist between White students and many students of color. If these gaps persist, they are likely to constrain the future productivity of the state’s workforce, which is increasingly racially diverse. Investments in K–12 education—such as addressing students’ learning loss and incorporating the use of phonics—could enhance the effectiveness of teachers and administrators and reduce achievement gaps.
Transportation infrastructure to sustain competitive advantages
Georgia has the world’s busiest passenger airport, the fourth-busiest seaport in the United States, the fifth-highest-quality roads and the seventh-highest-quality bridges in the country, and the largest rail network in the Southeast. The state’s economy owes much to its transportation infrastructure.
These advantages may erode as other states deploy historic levels of funding for transportation from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) of 2021. Over the next five years, Georgia is set to receive $8.9 billion from the act for highways alone. But efficient use of the funding—in addition to other potential investments—may be important because the state has invested less than both peer states and the national average in transportation infrastructure as a share of its GDP over the past 15 years.9
Georgia’s infrastructure for moving goods—airports, roads and bridges, and ports—has contributed significantly to the state’s economic growth. However, infrastructure that is critical for moving people, such as public transit, has seen underinvestment. Thirty-three counties in the state are transit deserts (characterized by poor access to public-transit options),10 and average commute times are about 50 percent higher for transit users than for drivers.11 Even in Atlanta, the state’s population center, the city’s MARTA rail network has recovered less of its prepandemic ridership than transit systems in peer cities such as Boston, Chicago, Dallas, and Miami.12 This represents a missed opportunity to better and more easily connect Georgians to opportunities.
Strategic investments in Georgia’s transportation infrastructure include initiatives—some that are already in place—to relieve road congestion and increase overall safety and efficiency. They also include investments in public and multimodal transit. In urban areas such as Atlanta, there are significant opportunities to make commuting by public transit more appealing and viable. Possible considerations include fostering higher density and more walkability around transit stations as well as expanding bus systems to transit deserts to reach more riders. Increasing available transit could create more commuter-friendly housing options for Atlanta residents, potentially alleviating the city’s growing challenges with housing affordability.13
When it comes to transporting goods, Georgia’s airports, particularly Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, have opportunities to expand their operating capacity and efficiency to continue to compete against more established air cargo hubs, such as John F. Kennedy International Airport and O’Hare International Airport. Long-term investments in ports may be another key to unlocking further growth, and the Port of Savannah has already begun to address short- and long-term challenges. Freight rail also has a role to play in relieving truck congestion on highways and increasing use of the state’s sizable rail network.
Georgia is well positioned to invest in solutions that address structural, long-term challenges to its economy, even in the face of global economic uncertainty. With up to $189 billion in incremental GDP growth on the table over the next ten years, Georgia can position its economy for sustained success and ensure all Georgians share a piece of the pie.