27 Chapter 2: Economic impacts on the Westchester County economy In this section, we estimate the economic impacts stemming from the added labor income of alumni in combination with their employers’ added non-labor income. This impact is based on the number of students who have attended SUNYWCC throughout its history. We then use this total number to consider the impact of those students in the single FY 2021-22. Former students who earned a degree as well as those who may not have finished their degree or did not take courses for credit are considered alumni. While SUNY WCC creates an economic impact through its operations and student spending, the greatest economic impact of SUNYWCC stems from the added human capital – the knowledge, creativity, imagination, and entrepreneurship – found in its alumni. While attending SUNY WCC, students gain experience, education, and the knowledge, skills, and abilities that increase their productivity and allow them to command a higher wage once they enter the workforce. But the reward of increased productivity does not stop there. Talented professionals make capital more productive too (e.g., buildings, production facilities, equipment¬). The employers of SUNY WCC alumni enjoy the fruits of this increased productivity in the form of additional non-labor income (i.e., higher profits). The methodology here differs from the previous impacts in one fundamental way. Whereas the previous spending impacts depend on an annually renewed injection of new sales into the county economy, the alumni impact is the result of years of past The greatest economic impact of SUNY WCC stems from the added human capital – the knowledge, creativity, imagination, and entrepreneurship – found in its alumni. Alumni impact
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