Economy of Minnesota

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Also known as: North Star State

The economic growth of early Minnesota was related closely to the exploitation of its primary natural resources—soils, iron ore, and timber—which in turn stimulated the growth of such ancillary activities as railroad building, natural resource processing, and agricultural implement manufacturing. During the late 1960s and early ’70s these began to decline, and service-related industries started to flourish. Agriculture, however, remains one of Minnesota’s major industries.

Agriculture, forestry, and fishing

Virtually all of Minnesota’s prairies had been cultivated by the turn of the 20th century. The coniferous forestlands, mostly cut by 1920, have become covered again by aspen, birch, and jack pine. Much of the Big Woods was cleared for crops and pasture, but Minnesota reached its peak in cultivated farmland in 1945. Since then the agricultural frontier retreated, and farms were abandoned in the less fertile areas in north-central and northeastern Minnesota, where soils are thin and acidic. The Big Woods area became primarily a dairying centre. Within about 100 miles (160 km) of the Twin Cities, dairying continues, but beyond that it has largely disappeared because of declining profitability. The prairie areas of southern and southwestern Minnesota support characteristically Corn Belt crops (corn [maize] and soybeans) and livestock.

Minnesota’s most valuable and productive farmland lies across the southern quarter of the state, mostly an area of dark, fertile prairie soils and hot, humid summer weather, where corn and soybeans are the major cash crops. Small grains and specialty crops thrive in the Red River valley, where the growing season is shorter and the humidity is lower than in southern Minnesota. Major crops cultivated there are wheat, hay, sugar beets, and barley.

Dairying dominates the hilly Big Woods region from southeastern to west-central Minnesota. Milk and milk products are the major sources of farm income in this region, with feed crops being important. Soybeans and potatoes are grown as supplemental cash crops. Large-scale turkey production is important in several localities.

The lumbering industry played an important part in the early economy of the state but declined rapidly after 1900, because the pine forests were depleted and much of the natural regrowth of aspen and birch had limited commercial value. In the latter half of the 20th century, however, Minnesota’s forest industry was revitalized with the growth of the wood pulp and waferboard industries. Pine, balsam, and spruce are harvested for pulpwood, while aspen, once considered a “weed” tree, has become the preferred species for waferboard manufacturing and accounts for about seven-tenths of the commercially harvested wood in Minnesota.

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Beginning in the late 19th century, commercial fishing thrived in Minnesota, especially in Lake Superior, but a reduced fish population (caused by overfishing and pollution) led to its decline in the late 20th century. Still, Lake Superior trout and whitefish are available in modest volume, and herring is abundant but less popular. Fishing of walleyed pike on the Red Lake Indian Reservation in north-central Minnesota was banned in 1995, but the ban was lifted a decade later following a restocking effort. Sport fishing is popular in the state’s major streams and rivers.

Resources and power

Iron ore accounts for more than nine-tenths of the value of all minerals produced in Minnesota. The Mesabi Range, the largest of three iron ranges in the state, began production in 1892 and at its peak produced one-fourth of the world’s iron ore. By the late 1950s, however, most of the high-grade natural ores of the Mesabi had been depleted. A process was developed at the University of Minnesota for extracting iron from the abundant but low-grade taconite rock. To encourage the heavy capital investment required for taconite processing, Minnesota voters approved a constitutional amendment in 1964 that guaranteed the taconite industry a tax-free period of 25 years. This resulted in a brief revitalization of the iron ore industry in Minnesota. By the 1980s, however, low-cost foreign steel reduced U.S. steel production, and lower-cost foreign ores began replacing Minnesota taconite in American steel mills. Taconite mining operations are still active, though, and there are several of these mines on the Mesabi Range.

Other mining activities in Minnesota include granite and limestone quarrying and sand and gravel extraction. There are no coal, oil, or natural gas resources in Minnesota, and geologic formations are such that the discovery of these minerals is highly unlikely. The state has oil refineries in the Twin Cities area, however, to process crude oil imported from Canada. Several natural gas pipelines also run from Canada and from other parts of the Midwest into Minnesota. Large deposits of low-grade copper-nickel, with traces of cobalt, platinum, palladium, and gold, exist in the Duluth Complex, a part of the ancient volcanic bedrock just north of Lake Superior, but they have not been exploited because of environmental concerns.

Coal-fired power plants account for the generation of about two-thirds of Minnesota’s electricity, while much of the remainder is produced by nuclear power plants near the Twin Cities. Wind farms are common, and turbines are located mainly in the southwest of the state. Minnesota is a major producer of ethanol, and many corn-based production plants are located in the southern part of the state. By law, Minnesota is required to use gasoline blended with ethanol, and at the beginning of the 21st century the state had more refueling stations that used gasoline containing up to 85 percent ethanol (E85) than any other U.S. state.

Manufacturing

Minnesota’s earliest industries included the manufacture of agricultural implements, machinery, tools, and hardware. From the 1880s to about 1920, Minneapolis was known as “the mill city,” producing more flour than any other city in the world, but it was surpassed after 1920 by Buffalo, N.Y., because of its proximity to eastern markets. While flour is no longer produced in Minneapolis, the major milling companies—now major consumer-products firms—retain their headquarters there. For example, the Twin Cities area is home to General Mills, Inc., one of the largest food-service manufacturers in the world. Aside from foodstuffs, some of the Minnesota’s present-day manufactures include chemicals, medical electronic devices, computer software, and recreational equipment. One of the state’s most prominent economic success stories is that of the Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company (3M Company), which was established in 1902 in the town of Two Harbors, on Lake Superior. The company quickly shifted its focus from mining to the manufacture of sandpaper and eventually prospered as the result of its creation and marketing of a wide range of products, including adhesive tape.

Services and labour

About three-fourths of Minnesotans are employed in the service industry. Since the late 1990s the financial, insurance, health care, high-technology, and tourism sectors have experienced growth in the Twin Cities and other urban areas. One of the state’s major tourist destinations is the Mall of America, the largest shopping mall in the country, located in the Minneapolis suburb of Bloomington. Minnesota is the birthplace of the Target chain of discount merchandise stores; it originated as a dry goods establishment in downtown Minneapolis in 1902. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act was passed in 1988 to generate revenue and create jobs in Minnesota’s tribal communities. Since that time, gambling has been a major source of income for the state.

Transportation

Minnesota’s transportation infrastructure is centred on the Twin Cities area. Regional and transcontinental rail and highway systems radiate outward from the Twin Cities. The rail system of northeastern Minnesota carries iron ore and taconite products for transshipment by boat at the Lake Superior ports of Duluth and Superior, Wis. Wheat from the Dakotas and Montana also has been an important product transshipped from rail to boat at Duluth.

Since the opening of the Great Lakes waterway to ocean vessels in 1959, products of the Upper Midwest have been carried directly to locations throughout the world. River transportation was the first important mode for the movement of both passengers and goods in many parts of the state. Barges on the Mississippi carry bulk products to and from the major inland ports at St. Paul and Minneapolis. Carried upstream are such bulk products as coal, oil, and salt; grain, sand, and gravel are transported downstream.

The Twin Cities area, served by several commercial airlines, is also the air hub of the Upper Midwest. The Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport is supplemented by a satellite network of additional airports around the state.