CSA's tie together the larger MSA to adjacent micropolitan areas that have an employment interchange of at least 15%. They also represent a region that shares the same labor and media market.
The only reasons I can think of for Tulsa's tepid growth is a lack of dynamic industries creating lots of jobs and the continued oil downturn which affects Tulsa as much as OKC. Lack of a large state university in the metro is likely another factor. There is a lot of positive momentum currently in Tulsa but it hasn't yet translated into higher growth, hopefully next year's numbers show a better return especially with O&G activity picking back up. The city itself has been growing and is now over 400,000 for the first time ever and the MSA has been so close to 1 million for the past several years but just hasn't been able to get over that hump.
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