List of companies based in Oregon

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This is a list of companies based in Oregon. Oregon is the ninth largest by area and the 27th most populous of the 50 United States. The gross domestic product (GDP) of Oregon in 2010 was $168.6 billion; it is the United States’s 26th wealthiest state by GDP. The state’s per capita personal income in 2010 was $44,447.[1]

Oregon has one of the largest salmon-fishing industries in the world, although ocean fisheries have reduced the river fisheries in recent years. The state is home to many breweries, and Portland has the largest number of breweries of any city in the world.[2] High technology industries and services have been major employers since the 1970s. Tektronix was the largest private employer in Oregon until the late 1980s. Intel’s creation and expansion of several facilities in eastern Washington County continued the growth that Tektronix had started. Intel is now the state’s largest for-profit private employer, with more than 17,000 employees,[3] while Providence Health & Services, a nonprofit, is the largest private employer.

Companies currently based in Oregon[edit]

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By type[edit]

Aircraft and airlines[edit]

Amusement parks[edit]

Design firms[edit]

Banks[edit]

Credit unions[edit]

Breweries[edit]

Broadcasting[edit]

Distilleries[edit]

Financial and consulting[edit]

Food (manufacturing and related)[edit]

Healthcare[edit]

Insurance[edit]

Lodging[edit]

Manufacturing companies[edit]

Publishers[edit]

Book publishers[edit]

News publishers[edit]

Record labels[edit]

Restaurants[edit]

Retail stores[edit]

Shipbuilders[edit]

Software companies[edit]

Utilities[edit]

Wineries[edit]

Companies formerly based in Oregon[edit]

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Defunct companies that were based in Oregon[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^

    Comparison of State and Local Government Revenue and Debt in the United States, Bureau of Economic Analysis.

  2. ^ “Oregon’s Beer Week gets under way”. Knight-Ridder Tribune News Service. July 5, 2005. Retrieved October 22, 2007.
  3. ^ Redden, Jim (January 9, 2014). “Report shows Intel tax breaks a net plus for state, county”. Beaverton Valley Times. Retrieved January 25, 2014.


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