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This city, so dependant upon the hospitality sector for its economic lifeblood may have permanently lost jobs and entire facets of its entertainment and hospitality industry.
This reality suggests there are further long-term costs to the local population and the national economy at large, again exacerbating the spiraling effect of the damage from Katrina. Particularly if the city's ills such as looting, health hazards posed by poor sanitation, poor drainage, and poor public relations are not treated in an expedient fashion, many businesses will likely relocate from the area, precipitating the core industries of local economy into long-term decline and adding to the costs of this terrible human and economic tragedy to the city and to America at large.
The article ends on a high note, stating that the impact of Katrina may be more modest than expected on a national level, but even if this is true in dollar terms, the blow to the image of New Orleans will surely impact its future commercial prospects in what was once its most marketable financial sector, that of tourism. The article's data shows once again how difficult it is to calculate the impact of a hurricane, and Katrina may have snuffed out some of the job prospects of the city's residents in an aspect of the city's financial life that seemed so vibrant and flourishing only days ago.
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" (McKinsey & Company and CECP, 2008, p.3) Fine, Kirkpatrick, Parker, and Watson (2008) in the work entitled: "Social Media: Philanthropy in a Connected World" states that today's companies can no longer "ignore the influence of social media and the opportunity to "deepen engagement with employees and customers alike through philanthropy efforts capitalizing on new media channels." (p.5) Fine, Kirkpatrick, Parker, and Watson (2008) additionally state that some companies have "already