For the Common Defense


FY 2012 Detailed ReportsFY 2012 Summary ReportsResources
All 50 States Detailed ReportsAll 50 States Summary ReportsAll Congressional District Spreadsheet Reports
North Carolina Contractor Location Data ReportsUSA Overview Summary ReportGovernment Contracting Office Glossary
North Carolina Place of Performance Data ReportsNorth Carolina Summary ReportFAQ
  Sequestration Whitepaper
  FY 2011 Reports Archive
  FY 2010 Reports Archive

North Carolina

Defense Breakdown Economic Impact Report
By Contractor Location Data -- Sorted by County

(FY 2012 Defense Contracts Baseline Data)

Estimated 9% to 18% Annual Budget Reductions Starting in FY 2013

Go to www.forthecommondefense.org/reports to view detailed reports on North Carolina counties, cities, Congressional Districts, industries, small businesses and information on sources and methodology.


         BACKGROUND ON THE DEFENSE BUDGET CUTS: 2013-2021

  • Our military is carrying an unfair burden of deficit cuts. To date, our Defense budget has been hit with 50% of deficit reduction -- yet it accounts for less than 20% of total federal spending. As a result of these cuts, in 2012 President Obama limited U.S. military capability to fighting one "regional conflict" and one "holding action."
     
  • Sequestration Defense budget cuts of $500 billion, combined with previous Defense cuts of another $487 billion, will cut defense spending in local communities by 9% to 18% between 2013 and 2021.
     
  • These reports show how estimates of defense budget reductions from 9% to 18% could affect North Carolina with cuts in defense jobs and businesses. Ask your elected officials for ongoing updates on how these defense cuts will affect your community.
     
  • Alternative solutions have been proposed to maintain a strong defense, reduce our deficit and avoid tax increases. Elected officials have proposed that the President and Congress reduce mandatory entitlement spending and make cuts in the non-security programs in the Federal budget. Over 60% of federal spending goes to entitlements like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and now Obamacare.
 

StateContract YearCountyContract Count$ AmountReduction
   by 9.0%
Reduction
   by 18.0%
North Carolina2012Alamance62$12,456,913-$1,121,122-$2,242,244
North Carolina2012Anson2$141,612-$12,745-$25,490
North Carolina2012Avery6$286,602-$25,794-$51,588
North Carolina2012Beaufort41$835,097-$75,159-$150,317
North Carolina2012Bladen14$3,655,507-$328,996-$657,991
North Carolina2012Brunswick101$19,497,392-$1,754,765-$3,509,531
North Carolina2012Buncombe222$15,439,583-$1,389,563-$2,779,125
North Carolina2012Burke54$8,357,415-$752,167-$1,504,335
North Carolina2012Cabarrus38$1,899,716-$170,974-$341,949
North Carolina2012Caldwell6$837,447-$75,370-$150,740
North Carolina2012Camden3$220,496-$19,845-$39,689
North Carolina2012Carteret137$33,095,403-$2,978,586-$5,957,173
North Carolina2012Caswell5$131,755-$11,858-$23,716
North Carolina2012Catawba44$3,233,730-$291,036-$582,071
North Carolina2012Chatham10$119,029-$10,713-$21,425
North Carolina2012Cherokee14$5,583,416-$502,507-$1,005,015
North Carolina2012Chowan15$181,722-$16,355-$32,710
North Carolina2012Cleveland29$9,457,291-$851,156-$1,702,312
North Carolina2012Columbus16$30,675,368-$2,760,783-$5,521,566
North Carolina2012Craven245$26,304,891-$2,367,440-$4,734,881
North Carolina2012Cumberland538$66,057,679-$5,945,191-$11,890,383
North Carolina2012Currituck43$64,860,736-$5,837,466-$11,674,933
North Carolina2012Dare11$575,402-$51,786-$103,572
North Carolina2012Davidson83$8,730,585-$785,753-$1,571,505
North Carolina2012Davie8$165,980-$14,938-$29,876
North Carolina2012Duplin8$146,221-$13,160-$26,320
North Carolina2012Durham605$85,685,791-$7,711,721-$15,423,443
North Carolina2012Edgecombe5$6,724,658-$605,219-$1,210,438
North Carolina2012Forsyth237$24,201,147-$2,178,103-$4,356,207
North Carolina2012Franklin37$6,570,978-$591,388-$1,182,776
North Carolina2012Gaston29$2,543,555-$228,920-$457,840
North Carolina2012Gates5$119,597-$10,764-$21,527
North Carolina2012Graham11$25,546,976-$2,299,228-$4,598,456
North Carolina2012Granville84$2,077,553-$186,980-$373,960
North Carolina2012Greene1$0$0$0
North Carolina2012Guilford458$182,169,490-$16,395,255-$32,790,510
North Carolina2012Halifax3$764,389-$68,795-$137,590
North Carolina2012Harnett130$58,089,948-$5,228,096-$10,456,191
North Carolina2012Haywood3-$18,911$1,702$3,404
North Carolina2012Henderson38$3,024,507-$272,206-$544,411
North Carolina2012Hertford1$5,800-$522-$1,044
North Carolina2012Hoke94$18,334,437-$1,650,099-$3,300,199
North Carolina2012Hyde1-$141,513$12,736$25,472
North Carolina2012Iredell84$23,020,476-$2,071,843-$4,143,686
North Carolina2012Jackson3$33,303-$2,997-$5,995
North Carolina2012Johnston33$2,282,928-$205,464-$410,927
North Carolina2012Jones23$7,406,083-$666,547-$1,333,095
North Carolina2012Lee42$1,024,082-$92,167-$184,335
North Carolina2012Lenoir68$63,846,347-$5,746,171-$11,492,343
North Carolina2012Lincoln9-$986,543$88,789$177,578
North Carolina2012Macon24$2,165,418-$194,888-$389,775
North Carolina2012Martin3$35,726-$3,215-$6,431
North Carolina2012Mecklenburg997$116,418,414-$10,477,658-$20,955,315
North Carolina2012Mitchell19$611,462-$55,032-$110,063
North Carolina2012Montgomery13$8,496,666-$764,700-$1,529,400
North Carolina2012Moore57$51,237,417-$4,611,368-$9,222,735
North Carolina2012Nash60$13,640,578-$1,227,652-$2,455,304
North Carolina2012New Hanover192$27,566,787-$2,481,011-$4,962,022
North Carolina2012Northampton1$113,481-$10,213-$20,427
North Carolina2012Onslow263$149,210,086-$13,428,908-$26,857,817
North Carolina2012Orange73$9,310,530-$837,948-$1,675,895
North Carolina2012Pamlico5$304,903-$27,441-$54,883
North Carolina2012Pasquotank26$740,713-$66,664-$133,328
North Carolina2012Pender23$9,828,971-$884,607-$1,769,215
North Carolina2012Person5$4,189,066-$377,016-$754,032
North Carolina2012Pitt70$40,303,885-$3,627,350-$7,254,700
North Carolina2012Randolph27$9,317,003-$838,530-$1,677,061
North Carolina2012Richmond2$743,557-$66,920-$133,840
North Carolina2012Robeson49$36,558,530-$3,290,268-$6,580,536
North Carolina2012Rockingham47$26,252,929-$2,362,764-$4,725,527
North Carolina2012Rowan13$6,251,599-$562,644-$1,125,288
North Carolina2012Rutherford4$1,786,185-$160,757-$321,513
North Carolina2012Sampson8$3,135,959-$282,236-$564,473
North Carolina2012Scotland7$58,938-$5,304-$10,609
North Carolina2012Stanly32$563,034-$50,673-$101,346
North Carolina2012Stokes4-$18,866$1,698$3,396
North Carolina2012Surry39$1,012,423-$91,118-$182,236
North Carolina2012Transylvania2$86,571-$7,791-$15,583
North Carolina2012Union368$29,367,646-$2,643,088-$5,286,176
North Carolina2012Vance3$184,778-$16,630-$33,260
North Carolina2012Wake1,113$181,793,845-$16,361,447-$32,722,893
North Carolina2012Watauga7$70,238-$6,321-$12,643
North Carolina2012Wayne95$56,425,533-$5,078,298-$10,156,596
North Carolina2012Wilkes29$451,918-$40,673-$81,345
North Carolina2012Wilson280$11,517,334-$1,036,560-$2,073,120
North Carolina2012Yadkin13$398,252-$35,843-$71,685
TOTAL  7,732$1,625,403,575-$146,286,324-$292,572,652

Data sources and more data available at www.governmentcontractswon.com, compiled from public data at www.fpds.gov

Created by the Center for Security Policy Defense Breakdown Economic Impact Report Generator (v.2.8.0-CL) November 6, 2013 16:39:49 www.forthecommondefense.org