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source_pdf: oregon-prosperity-council-report-june-2026.pdf
fingerprint: 8ac9aef8ca1b
page_range: [9, 12]
breadcrumb: ["Full Report", "Introduction: Pillars of Prosperity"]
source_links:
  pdf: "https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=9"
  raw_pages:
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0009.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0010.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0011.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0012.txt"
---

# Introduction: Pillars of Prosperity

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## TL;DR  *(generated · confidence: high)*

The Oregon Prosperity Council introduction frames the state's economic crisis—stagnant incomes, population slowdown, business departures—and calls for urgent, bold reforms focused on jobs growth, accountability, and competitiveness. The recommendations emerge from a statewide engagement process spanning 1,000+ survey responses, 60+ listening sessions across 11 regions, and 45+ stakeholder submissions. Five growth sectors are identified: agriculture, forestry, applied AI, sports/outdoor industries, and life sciences/clean energy. The approach prioritizes proven strategies and measurable outcomes.

**Key points** *(each cites a PDF page)*:

- Public survey generated over 1,000 responses from participants representing nearly every county in Oregon ([p. 12](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=12))
- More than 60 listening sessions held across all eleven economic development regions in the state ([p. 11](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=11))
- Over 45 letters submitted representing advocacy organizations, industry perspectives, and community leaders ([p. 12](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=12))
- Five key sectors identified as poised for growth: Agriculture & Food, Forestry & Wood Products, Applied/Physical AI, Sports & Outdoor Industries, and Life Sciences & Clean Energy Technologies ([p. 11](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=11))
- Oregon faces stagnant incomes, slowed population growth, employers finding it harder to invest and expand, and fewer opportunities for workers and families ([p. 10](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=10))
- Council calls for reforms that improve accountability, modernize government, and ensure public resources deliver measurable results for Oregonians ([p. 10](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=10))
- Prosperity framework includes small businesses, entrepreneurs, family-owned businesses, and larger employers creating more and better-paying jobs ([p. 11](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=11))

Amounts: over 1,000 responses · more than 60 listening sessions · over 45 letters · Dates/FTE: June 2026 · Parties: Oregon Prosperity Council · Oregon Legislature

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> **Source:** PDF [pp. 9-12](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=9) · raw: [9](../../.extracted/pages/page-0009.txt) · [10](../../.extracted/pages/page-0010.txt) · [11](../../.extracted/pages/page-0011.txt) · [12](../../.extracted/pages/page-0012.txt)

Breadcrumb: Full Report > Introduction: Pillars of Prosperity

---
FULL REPORT
O R E G O N P R O S P E R IT Y C O U NC I L
Recommendations for
Oregon’s Long-Term
Competitiveness & Prosperity

P I L L A R S O F P R O S P E R IT Y
In Oregon, we know the power of coming together to make bold choices that
reflect our shared values and benefit all Oregonians. It’s how we have become
known over the years for our natural resources, innovative businesses, and
strong communities. And it’s exactly what the Prosperity Council is here to
do, and why we as its members signed up for this work.
Today, Oregon’s economic future is uncertain, and stagnant incomes, increasing pressure on public
we are in danger of missing an entire generation services, and fewer opportunities for people to build a
of growth and prosperity. We have lost sight of what better future for themselves and their children.
it takes to set up our state for success:
It’s time for urgent action to bridge
strong vision and coordination at all
our differences and fix what’s not
levels of government. As a result, the
It’s time for urgent working to put Oregon back on
state is struggling under the weight of
a path to prosperity. Incremental
overlapping and constraining policy action to bridge
change will not be enough.
decisions, keeping us at the back of
our differences Oregon’s challenges now require
the national pack on critical measures
solutions equal in scale, and our
like education, taxes, and regulation. and fix what’s not
leaders must be willing to pursue
Too often, Oregonians are paying more
working to put reforms that improve accountability,
while feeling they receive less in return.
modernize government, and ensure
Costs are rising, businesses are stalling Oregon back on a
public resources are delivering
or leaving, and too many Oregonians
path to prosperity. measurable results for Oregonians.
are struggling.
The recommendations in this report
At the same time, population growth reflect a practical, results-oriented
has slowed, employers are finding it harder to invest approach focused on proven strategies and meaningful
and expand, and many communities are seeing fewer outcomes rather than ideology, with the goal of
opportunities for workers and families. If Oregon does moving the needle on the issues that matter most to
not change course, the state risks slower job growth, Oregon’s future.
- 10 -
OREGON PROSPERITY COUNCIL | RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OREGON’S LONG-TERM COMPETITIVENESS AND PROSPERITY | JUNE 2026

u Prosperity means more than growth alone. It
means small businesses, entrepreneurs, family-owned OREGON IS POISED FOR
businesses, and larger employers can create more and
GROWTH & NATURAL LEADERSHIP
better-paying jobs. It means our public agencies are
Sectors include:
fiscally stable, and everyone has access to high-quality
education, healthcare, and other essential services. It
means an economy that works for people across the
state, including employers, small business owners, and
workers. To do that, we need to align and streamline our
systems, while staying true to the core values that define AGRICULTURE, FOOD & BEVERAGES
our state and make us special.
u We must change our economic trajectory. To be
among the leading states in the next decade of prosperity,
we need to take advantage of our location, resources, and
talent in areas that are poised for growth. FORESTRY & WOOD PRODUCTS
u This is an inflection point for Oregon, and our
leaders must rise to meet it. We cannot continue to
foster a culture of ambivalence about growth, and we
cannot take growth for granted. We must choose every
day to nurture and support our business ecosystem.
APPLIED/PHYSICAL AI
Including semiconductors and robotics
The Prosperity Council calls on our Governor and the
Legislature to adopt a more audacious vision for Oregon’s
future, one grounded in jobs growth (including support
for entrepreneurs and for the expansion of existing
businesses), accountability, competitiveness, innovation,
SPORTS & OUTDOOR INDUSTRIES
and broad-based prosperity. The state’s economic
Including apparel, spectator events, and tourism
challenges are significant, but so is Oregon’s potential, if
leaders are willing to act boldly and with urgency.
The following recommendations are a result of a statewide
effort to listen, synthesize, and share the views and real
concerns of Oregonians. The Council has worked hard
to achieve balance in our recommendations between LIFE SCIENCES &
immediate fixes and longer-term systemic changes to CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES
keep Oregon relevant and prosperous into the future.
Purpose and Process
The Oregon Prosperity Council developed its recommendations through a statewide engagement process designed to
gather input from a broad cross-section of Oregon businesses, community organizations, public agencies, educational
institutions, workforce partners, tribal governments, and residents. The engagement effort combined multiple
methods to capture both structured and qualitative feedback, including a public survey, facilitated listening sessions,
- 11 -
OREGON PROSPERITY COUNCIL | RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OREGON’S LONG-TERM COMPETITIVENESS AND PROSPERITY | JUNE 2026

and written submissions. The public survey generated over 1,000 responses from participants representing nearly
every county in Oregon, while more than 60 listening sessions were held across all eleven economic development
regions in the state. In addition, stakeholders submitted over 45 letters representing advocacy organizations, industry
1
perspectives, and community leaders points of view.
The Council’s engagement process used common discussion questions and frameworks across all engagement
activities. Feedback was organized around key themes related to Oregon’s business climate, workforce, and
economic development tools, then analyzed to identify recurring priorities, areas of consensus, and differing view
points. This process provided the Council with a strong foundation of stakeholder input that supplemented their
own individual outreach. Together, this information was used to inform recommendations and ensure they reflected
opportunities and aspirations expressed by communities and employers across the state.
1 See Appendix A. Engagement Report, Appendix B. Survey Questions, Appendix C. Survey Responses, Appendix D. Facilitator’s Guide, and Appendix E. Sub-
missions and Feedback
- 12 -
OREGON PROSPERITY COUNCIL | RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OREGON’S LONG-TERM COMPETITIVENESS AND PROSPERITY | JUNE 2026

---

Parent: [Full Report](./INDEX.md) · PDF: [pp. 9-12](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=9)
