Topics

What You Need To Know About The Seacoast's Economy

Background

drocpsu / Flickr

New Hampshire's Seacoast economy is a blend of traditional sectors, like fishing and tourism, and innovative, high-tech start-ups

This page is no longer being updated. For ongoing coverage of this topic, go to New Hampshire Public Radio.

______

At 18 miles long, New Hampshire has the shortest ocean shoreline in America.  But for centuries, this small strip of land has been the heart of the state’s Seacoast region.

The Seacoast is home to New Hampshire’s commercial fishing industry, and has been since the establishment of the first fishing colony in 1623.  But in recent decades, the area’s fishermen have struggled to maintain their foothold in the sector.  In Portsmouth, the Seacoast’s main city, the U.S. Census Bureau found only 0.2 percent of residents work in the “farming, fishing and forestry occupations” category.

Today, a significant portion of the Seacoast’s economy is tourism-based.  Portsmouth’s historic buildings and the draw of Hampton Beach, among other attractions, have allowed a number of small business owners to make a living catering to visitors.

In addition to tourism, the Seacoast is home to a thriving professional sector.  A number of people are employed in the financial services and high-tech sectors. Compared to New Hampshire as a whole, the Census Bureau reports Portsmouth has a higher percentage of people working in management and professional roles.  Statewide, 38 percent of workers have these higher-dollar jobs, compared to 46 percent of Portsmouth residents.

Home values in Portsmouth also skew high.  There, 54 percent of owner-occupied homes are valued from $300,000 to $999,999, while statewide, that accounts for only 35 percent of homes.  The portion of Portsmouth homes valued at $1 million or more is also double the figure for all of New Hampshire.

Despite this comparative prosperity, the Seacoast has its struggles.  Most notably, there are a number of environmental issues surrounding declining water quality in the area’s vital Great Bay Estuary.  These problems could prove costly to fix in the short-term, and have the potential to harm the Seacoast’s economy in the long-term.

Latest Posts

For New Hampshire, Cain’s 9-9-9 Means New Taxes

New Hampshire is one of a small minority of states without a sales tax.* So when Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain announced his 9-9-9 Plan — 9 percent corporate tax, 9 percent income tax, and a 9 percent national sales tax — residents of New Hampshire started feeling a bit nervous.  While the Cain plan […]

StateImpact Wants To Know: Is Junk Mail Propping Up The Ailing Postal Service?

My Mom is a one-woman focus group.  I call her “America.” She’s your average Baby Boomer with a mid-level office job in the middle of the country.  She loves the sitcom “Two And A Half Men” (at least, when Charlie Sheen was on), she’s a faithful “American Idol” viewer, and she always knows who will […]

NH Tourism Up Despite Irene Damage

Four days ago, StateImpact, along with other New Hampshire media outlets, was questioning how many tourists–and how much tourism money–the state would bring in over the Labor Day weekend.  After all, visitors and residents alike have been confused about the status some of New Hampshire’s remoter roads that are key to the tourism industry.  Even […]

Vacation Homes in New Hampshire: The Who, The What and The Where

If you’ve got five minutes to burn, check out StateImpact’s town-by-town interactive map. Just find your town, click on it, and see how many vacation homes are there, and what percentage of the housing stock they make up. If you’ve got 10 minutes, you can get the context behind the numbers with our written analysis. And if you’ve got an hour or more, the map will keep you very, very entertained. Trust us.

DHHS Accused Of Underfunding Children’s Homes, Putting Surplus Back Into General Fund

Controversy over state funding for social and health services has already generated a high-profile lawsuit filed by 10 New Hampshire hospitals.  Whether more lawsuits in response to the current budget are coming down the pike remains to be seen.  But new one case, covered by Elizabeth Dinan at SeacoastOnline.com, has been percolating for years: “Portsmouth’s Chase Home […]

Exeter Could Seize Deeds To More Than 80 Homes And Businesses

Although it’s easy to generalize the Seacoast as a well-to-do place, that’s not always the case–especially, it seems, for Exeter.  Aaron Sanborn of Seacoastonline reports: “After years of not receiving property taxes, the town may have to take ownership of more than 80 properties later this fall. Both business and residential property owners owe the town […]

Memorial Bridge Losing Weight

After years of hanging together with the civil engineering equivalent of duct tape and hope, Memorial Bridge, connecting Portsmouth to Kittery, Maine, is finally closed for good.  At least as far as drivers are concerned, anyway.  The New Hampshire Department of Transportation has been keeping its fingers crossed, hoping the 88-year old bridge would hold up […]

Alien Abduction A Tourism Draw?

If you haven’t heard of Betty and Barney Hill, you either weren’t born–or very old–before the 1960’s, or you’re not terribly interested in (alleged) alien abductions. I promise, this really (might) have to do with business. Anyway, the Hills were a Portsmouth couple who were driving through the White Mountains in 1961 when they claimed to have seen a […]

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education