From RENJ:
Outsized impact: New Jersey warehouses support 1.35 million jobs, $113 billion in personal income, study finds
Warehouses and distribution centers in New Jersey are home to more than 760,000 on-site employees and support more than 1.35 million jobs overall, according to a newly released report, highlighting the vital role that the facilities play in the state’s economy.
The study, conducted by Rutgers University’s Center for Advanced Infrastructure and Transportation or CAIT, also found that the buildings support nearly $113 billion in personal income and nearly $296 billion in business activity. That translates to nearly $11.3 billion in local and state tax revenues and almost $22.6 billion in federal taxes, as researchers gleaned when accounting for some 956 million square feet of occupied space at the end of 2024.
NAIOP New Jersey announced the findings on Wednesday after commissioning the report (available here) in partnership with the Shipping Association of New York and New Jersey, part of an ongoing push to call attention to the outsized benefits of the logistics sector and the facilities that support it.
“The logistics industry is an impressive economic engine for New Jersey,” NAIOP New Jersey CEO Dan Kennedy said. “Often lost in the conversation are the economic contributions made by the existing warehouse and distribution centers that create an eye-opening number of jobs and contribute an irreplaceable amount of federal, state and local taxes that support critical services for all New Jersey residents.
“With all the state and local discussions going on about warehouse development and supporting infrastructure, we feel the public deserves to know the truth — warehouses and distribution centers make a substantial economic contribution to New Jersey’s economy that no industry can match.”
The report — which did not include Atlantic, Cape May, Cumberland and Ocean counties due to a lack of consistent data — focused on warehouses and distribution centers of at least 20,000 square feet while excluding production facilities and data centers. A team led by Rutgers’ Anne Strauss-Wieder conducted the research using published reports, fieldwork, engineering information and the extensive knowledge of an advisory committee to develop a consensus estimation of the number of workers in the facilities, allowing it to quantify the ongoing economic value generated by the operations.
