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Show The industrial and tourist promotion groups in the State of Utah have as one of their major objectives the creation of increased export demand. If the Households sector is considered to be endogenous, then Exports are the largest and perhaps most important component of Final Demand. The data in Tables 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13 answer, at least partially, some of the questions relating to the effects that increased export demand in a given sector has upon income, output, and water intake. In lieu of a complete set of 40 tables ( which could quite easily be generated) the above five tables were prepared on a broad industry basis. For example, Table 9 presents the increase in output, income, and water demand resulting from the independently projected increase in exports in all three of the Agriculture sectors. Similar data for the Mining and Manufacturing sectors are given in Tables 10 and 11, respectively, while Table 12 presents the results for a combination of the Retail Trades and Services sectors. These data are examples of multiplier effects similar to those discussed earlier in this paper. Since the results were generated by the matrix with Households as an endogenous sector, induced effects as well as direct and indirect effects are included. As already mentioned, this was not presented on a sector- by- sector basis, so the multipliers are not pure sector multipliers but rather a weighted average of a group of sector multipliers ( weighted by the proportion that the exports in each sector are to the total exports of that group of sectors). A summary of the aggregate Type II multipliers from Tables 9 through 12 is given in Table 13. 48 |