Types of rural communities
![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Rural area |
---|
The basic trend seems to be one in which communities are required to become entrepreneurial. Those that lack the sort of characteristics mentioned below, are forced to either seek out their niche or accept eventual economic defeat. These towns focus on marketing and public relations whilst bidding for business and government operations, such as factories or off-site data processing.
For instance,
Academic communities
The primary employers in an academic community are
Academic institutions in rural areas are very much like factories in that the economic success of the community depends upon the success of the institution. However, academic institutions primarily offer medium-skilled or professional jobs, while factories tend toward low-skilled work.
Examples: Ames, Iowa; Bath, Maine; Plainfield, Vermont.
Area Trade-Centers
The
Generally, businesses in a trade-center town, except for those in competition with the mall, will benefit from the mall's presence as shoppers spill over. However, business in nearby towns will suffer as shoppers converge on the town with the greatest variety of stores.
Examples: West Burlington, Iowa; Wickenburg, Arizona.
Exurbs
See: Commuter town, Exurb
Government centers
Government in rural regions is becoming increasingly consolidated, so that a small number of towns are centers of government activity, while the rest are devoid of government infrastructure. These centers include state and local capitals, and areas with prisons or military bases.
Centralized public administration focuses public-sector employment on a single community, assisting it over its neighbors. Benefits for the government center include improved public services, increased efficiency, and economic savings.
Examples: Lorton, Virginia; Quantico, Virginia.
Recreation communities
Recreation communities ("tourist towns") define some local feature, usually a historic site or scenic vista, as a "natural resource" and market this to tourists. Travelers will then spend money on food, hotels, and the like, which brings capital into the town.
Examples:
Retirement communities
Retirement communities tend to house large numbers of elderly people who have left the workforce. These retirees bring pensions, Social Security, and savings which infuse the area with capital. Many rural hospitals do not have enough patients to support their operational budgets, but those near retirement communities can make up for this by focusing on gerontology.
Retirement communities often have
Examples: Green Valley, Arizona; Heritage Village, Connecticut.
See also: demographic history of the United States, rural sociology, sociology
See also
References
- ^ "Atlas of Rural and Small-Town America". www.ers.usda.gov. Retrieved 2025-02-02.
The Atlas of Rural and Small-Town America provides statistics by broad categories of socioeconomic factors: People, Jobs, County classifications, Income, and Veterans.