The Economic Contribution of the MWAA Executive Summary | Page 7

Key take-aways of the study include: ‒ ‒ If the $23.6 billion of output stimulated by the Airports Authority were embodied as a single publicly traded company, it would rank No. 123 on the 2017’s Fortune 500. ‒ ‒ GDP is generally considered the broadest measure of the size and health of a local economy. The Airports Authority's contribution to regional GDP is nearly $14.4 billion. ‒ ‒ The $14.4 billion in GDP stimulated by the Airports Authority is equivalent to $39.4 million per day. ‒ ‒ The 187,200 jobs supported by the Airports Authority is equivalent to the sixth-largest city in Virginia. ‒ ‒ The total number of jobs supported by the Airports Authority is more than enough to simultaneously fill FedEx Field, Nationals Park, the U.S. Naval Academy's Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, and DC United’s Audi Field combined. ‒ ‒ The Airports Authority had 1,883 direct employees in 2017. This means that, for every single Airports Authority job, another 100 jobs were supported across the region: 66 in Virginia, 15 in Maryland, and 19 in Washington, DC. Functionally, 70 of these jobs were driven by visitor spending, 24 by companies doing business at the airports, and 6 by the Airports Authority's local spending. ‒ ‒ The Airports Authority helped stimulate over $1.1 billion in state and local taxes during 2017. This translates to a daily rate of $3.0 million in revenues that flowed to local tax authorities. ‒ ‒ According to the National Education Association, the annual expenditures per pupil in Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, DC are $11,141, $14,774, and $25,025, respectively. This means the $1.1 billion in state and local taxes generated by the Airports Authority could educate more than 87,000 students across the region for one year.