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Sector <br />Construction <br />Education and Health Services <br />Financial Activities <br />Information <br />Leisure and Hospitality <br />Manufacturing <br />Natural Resources and Mining <br />Other Services <br />Professional and Business Servic <br />Public Administration <br />Trade, Transportation, and Utili <br />Employment, 2409 <br />3,459 <br />15,032 <br />1,624 <br />607 <br />9,871 <br />6,535 <br />194 <br />1,658 <br />6,678 <br />3,084 <br />13,976 <br />0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 <br />Employment, 2009 <br />www. nenrainstnts .unn.edu /sshnrel.hfml <br />Additional Source Notes <br />1. The 11 sectors reported here are the 'High-Level Aggregates' that BLS has defined as extensions to the <br />NAICS 2002 system. There are 12 sectors in all, but a serious discontinuity in the data series for the <br />'Unclassified' sector after 1999 precluded its use here. Some sectors in the tables are reported as V, <br />meaning that the BLS did not disclose data that might reveal information about specific firms or that the <br />sector did not exist in the area during 2007 -2009. <br />2. This application was inspired by another SAS /Internet application for shift -share analysis written by <br />Dr. Gary Smith of Washington State University. You can visit Dr. Smith's website at http: / /niip.wsu.edu/ <br />3. Substantial material has been borrowed from this source: Kriesel, Warren and Irfan Tareen. Analysis <br />of Employment Shifts, 1987 -1990: State and Regional Economic Development Views. Research Report <br />08 -93 -100, Small Business Development Center, University of Georgia. 1993. <br />Distribution of Employment for 2009, Cabarrus County <br />