Economy of New York City

Economy of New York City
The NASDAQ MarketSite in Times Square.

The economy of New York City is the biggest regional economy in the United States and the second largest city economy in the world after Tokyo.[1] Anchored by Wall Street, in Lower Manhattan, New York City is one of the world's two premier financial centres, alongside London[2][3][4][5][6][7][8] and is home to the New York Stock Exchange, the world's largest stock exchange by market capitalization of its listed companies. New York is distinctive for its high concentrations of advanced service sector firms in fields such as law, accountancy, banking and management consultancy.[9]

The financial, insurance, health care, and real estate industries form the basis of New York's economy. The city is also the most important center for mass media, journalism and publishing in the United States, and is the preeminent arts center in the country. Creative industries such as new media, advertising, fashion, design and architecture account for a growing share of employment, with New York City possessing a strong competitive advantage in these industries.[10] Manufacturing, although declining, remains consequential.

The New York Stock Exchange is by far the largest stock exchange in the world by market capitalization of listed companies. The NASDAQ electronic exchange has the most companies listed and is third largest in the world by market capitalization of listed companies.

The New York metropolitan area had an estimated gross metropolitan product of $1.28 trillion in 2010,[11] the largest regional economy in the United States.[12] The city's economy accounts for the majority of the economic activity in the states of New York and New Jersey.[12]

Contents

Real estate and corporate location

Real estate is a significant factor in the city of New York's economy. In 2006 the total value of Manhattan property was $802.4 billion [13] The Google building, 111 Eighth Ave. is the property with the highest-listed market value in the city, at $1.8 billion in 2006.[14] The UK consulting firm Mercer, in a 2009 assessment "conducted to help governments and major companies place employees on international assignments", ranked New York City 49th worldwide in quality of living; the survey factored in political stability, personal freedom, sanitation, crime, housing, the natural environment, recreation, banking facilities, availability of consumer goods, education, and public services including transportation.[15]

The MetLife Building, formerly the Pan Am Building

Some of the most expensive office space in the United States is located in New York City. 450 Park Avenue was sold on July 2, 2007 for $510 million, about $1,589 per square foot ($17,104/m²), breaking the barely month-old record for an American office building of $1,476 per square foot ($15,887/m²) set in the June 2007 sale of 660 Madison Avenue.[16] Manhattan had 353.7 million square feet (32,860,000 m²) of office space in 2001.[17]

Midtown Manhattan is the largest central business district in the world. New York City has long been the leading business center in the United States, but with the city's fiscal crisis in the 1970s a new trend began to develop resulting in corporate headquarters and subsidiaries gradually moving to the suburbs and other regions.

In 2005 there were 602 stand-alone headquarter operations for major companies in the city.[18] Many international corporations are headquartered in the city, including more Fortune 500 companies than any other city. It is also the home of JetBlue Airways, headquartered in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Queens.

Out of the 500 U.S. corporations with the largest revenues in 2010, as listed by Fortune magazine in May 2011, 45 had headquarters in New York City and another 12 elsewhere in New York state (total 57). In the 1997 Fortune 500, 46 corporations had New York City headquarters, out of 61 corporations headquartered in New York state.[19]

In the May 2008 Fortune 500 list, reflecting the year before the global financial crisis of 2007-2010, five of the top 25 Fortune 500 companies in New York City were classified as securities firms (reflecting the importance of Wall Street), but two years later, none were. Two of the securities firms (Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley) had converted themselves into commercial banks, while different banks had absorbed either the organization or the post-liquidation assets of the other three firms (Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers).[20]

Finance

The New York Stock Exchange is the largest in the world by dollar volume.

The New York Stock Exchange, located on Wall Street, and the NASDAQ are the world's first and second largest stock exchanges, respectively, when measured by average daily trading volume and overall market capitalization.[21] Financial services account for more than 35 percent of the city's employment income.[22]

New York City has been a leading center of finance in the world economy since the end of World War I.[23] As of August, 2008 the city's financial services industry employs 344,700 workers.[24] Manhattan is home to six major stock, commodities and futures exchanges: American Stock Exchange, International Securities Exchange, NASDAQ, New York Board of Trade, New York Mercantile Exchange, and New York Stock Exchange. This contributes to New York City being a major financial service exporter, both within the United States and globally.

The World Financial Center, containing the offices of many financial firms.

The 344,700 workers in the finance industry collect more than half of all the wages paid in Manhattan, although they hold fewer than one of every six jobs in the borough. The pay gap between them and the 1.5 million other workers in Manhattan continues to widen, causing some economists to worry about the city’s growing dependence on their extraordinary incomes. Those high salaries contribute to job growth, but most of this job growth occurs in lower-paying service jobs in restaurants, retail and home health care and not many jobs in highly paid areas.[3]

Since the founding of the Federal Reserve banking system, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in Manhattan's financial district has been where monetary policy in the United States is implemented, although policy is decided in Washington by the Federal Reserve Bank's Board of Governors. The New York Fed is the largest, in terms of assets, and the most important of the twelve regional banks. It is responsible for the second district, which covers New York State and the New York City region, as well as Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The New York Fed is responsible for conducting open market operations, the buying and selling of outstanding US Treasury securities. In 2003, Fedwire, the Federal Reserve's system for transferring balances between it and other banks, transferred $1.8 trillion a day in funds, of which about $1.1 trillion originated in the Second District. It transferred an additional $1.3 trillion a day in securities, of which $1.2 trillion originated in the Second District. The New York Federal Reserve is the only regional bank with a permanent vote on the Federal Open Market Committee and its president is traditionally selected as the Committee's vice chairman. The bank also has the largest gold repository in the world, larger even than Fort Knox. Its vault is 80 feet (25 m) beneath the street and holds $160 billion worth of gold bullion.

Manufacturing

Manufacturing accounts for a significant share of employment. Garments, chemicals, metal products, processed foods, and furniture are some of the principal products.[25] The food-processing industry is the most stable major manufacturing sector in the city.[26] Food making is a $5 billion industry that employs more than 19,000 residents, many of them immigrants who speak little English. Chocolate is New York City's leading specialty-food export, with $234 million worth of exports each year.[26]

There are over 233,000 manufacturing jobs in more than 10,000 New York City industrial businesses [4], with the highest concentration of industrial employment in Manhattan. This includes manufacturing, warehousing, utilities, and transportation. Manufacturing jobs average $41,000 annually (NYS DOL, 2nd Qtr 2005), about $10,000 more than comparable jobs in retail or restaurants. The manufacturing sector has the highest percentage of first-generation immigrants making up 64% of the workforce (NYC Dept. City Planning) and African Americans comprising 78% of the production workforce (2004 American Community Survey).

These are small businesses, with an average size of 21 employees (NYS DOL, 2nd Qtr 2005). Examples of goods manufactured in the city include broadway costumes, custom-made cabinets, croissant for hotels, and wooden crates for shipping fine art. These items are labor-intensive and require collaboration between the end-user and the manufacturer. In recent years, as real estate and globalization pressures have increased, the remaining manufacturers have become more design-oriented and single customer-focused. To boot, production methods have become cleaner and more technology-driven.

Despite the adaptability of New York manufacturers, there remain looming challenges to the sector’s survival. A 2003 city-sponsored survey of the industrial sector identified three major local challenges to retaining businesses: 1) high cost of real estate; 2) high costs of doing business; and, 3) uncertainty about land use policy.

A 12,900-square-foot (1,200 m2) biodiesel plant run by Tri-State Biodiesel, LLC will begin construction in the Bronx in 2010. The facility will process used cooking oil collected by TSB from over 2000[27] New York restaurants with methanol and a catalyst to create biodiesel fuel. More than 1 million US gallons (3,800 m3) of waste oil could be collected in Brooklyn every year according to a 2004 Cornell study. The fuel produces 78 percent less carbon-dioxide emissions than standard diesel.

Information technology

High-tech industries like software development, gaming design, and Internet services are also growing; New York is the leading international internet gateway in the United States, with 430 Gbit/s of international internet capacity terminates, because of its position at the terminus of the transatlantic fiber optic trunkline. By comparison, the number two U.S. hub, Washington/Baltimore, has 158 Gbit/s of internet terminates.[5] More than two-thirds of New Yorkers have Internet in their homes.

According to New York’s Economic Development Corporation, telecom carriers, cable companies, Internet service providers and publishers were a $23 billion industry in 2003. This represents over three percent of the city’s economy. The sector employs 43,000 city residents.

In 2006 Google moved into 311,000 square feet (28,900 m2) of office space in the second-largest building in New York City, at 111 Eighth Avenue in Manhattan. The location is one of the most important "telecom hotels" in the world, a giant networking facility adjacent to the Hudson Street/Ninth Avenue fiber highway, one of the most critical Internet arteries in the world. Employing more than 500 people, it is Google's largest engineering complex outside of company headquarters. Google products engineered in the New York offices include Maps, Docs, Checkout, Blog search, and Mobile search. Google's large investment in its New York operations has led to speculation about new multimedia initiatives by the company.[citation needed]

Trade

The Haier Building

City of New York is unique among American cities for its large number of foreign corporations. One out of every ten private sector jobs in the city is with a foreign company. Often this makes the perspective of New York’s business community internationalist and at odds with Washington’s foreign policy, trade policy, and visa policy.[6]

Since 2000, China has been New York's leading growth market for exports. The New York Metropolitan Region is home to more than half of the 32 largest Chinese companies with offices in the United States. These companies represent a broad array of industries including shipping, steel, energy and manufacturing firms, and services. Many have chosen to open headquarters in New York in anticipation of eventual listing on the respective New York stock exchanges and entering U.S. capital markets.[28] New York City currently boasts seven Chinese daily newspapers, two Chinese language television stations, and the largest Chinese neighborhood in the United States. New York area airports provide 12 daily flights to Hong Kong and five to Beijing, the most flights out of the eastern half of the United States.[28]

In one measure of how international New York City's economy is, data compiled by the agents Knight Frank show foreign owners make up 34% of sales in the city's prime residential market. New York ranks ahead of Paris, where such sales account for 27%, Hong Kong (13%), and Sydney (9%). London, however, is the most cosmopolitan world city in terms of property ownership; more than 51% of homes there worth more than £2m ($3.8m, EU3m) sold in 2005 have gone to overseas buyers from Russia, the Middle East and elsewhere.[29]

International shipping has always been a major part of the city's economy because of New York's natural harbor, but with the advent of containerization most cargo shipping has moved from the Brooklyn waterfront across the harbor to the Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal in New Jersey. Some cargo shipping remains; for example, Brooklyn still handles the majority of cocoa bean imports to the United States.[30]

Health care and biomedical

Research and Medical services drive New York's major healthcare industry. New York City has the most post-graduate life sciences degrees awarded annually in the United States, 60,000 licensed physicians, and 127 Nobel laureates with roots in local institutions. New York receives the second-highest amount of annual funding from the National Institutes of Health among all U.S. cities.

The major publicly-traded biopharma companies include Bristol Myers Squibb, ImClone Systems, OSI Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Regeneron, CuraGen, and Alexion Pharmaceuticals . Pfizer shifted 1,000 jobs to New York City from New Jersey, Missouri, Michigan and California in 2003. According to the Partnership for New York City, New York institutions create more biotechnology-related patents than any other metropolitan area in the United States.

Health care industry employs approximately 565,000 people in New York City, according to the U.S. Census, making it the city's largest employer. In New York, the 565,000 people work at more than 70 hospitals, and the city's 20 public hospitals served 1.5 million people in 1998 alone.

Media

New York is by far the most important center for American mass media, journalism and publishing. The city is the number-one media market in the United States with 7% of the country’s television-viewing households. Three of the Big Four music recording companies have their headquarters in the city. One-third of all independent films are produced in the Big Apple. More than 200 newspapers and 350 consumer magazines have an office in the city. The book publishing industry alone employs 25,000 people. For these reasons, New York is often called "the media capital of the world." It is also home to PBS stations WLIW and WNET. WNET's headquarters are in Manhattan, and WLIW's headquarters are in Plainview, New York, which is located on Long Island.

Film

The city's television and film industry is the second largest in the country after Hollywood.[31]

Film is a growing sector; according to the Mayor's Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting New York City attracted over 250 independent and studio films in 2005, an increase from 202 in 2004 and 180 in 2003. More than a third of professional actors in the United States are based in New York.[32] The city's movie industry employs 100,000 New Yorkers, according to the Office, and about $5 billion is brought by the industry to the city's economy every year The Kaufman-Astoria film studio in Queens, built during the silent film era, was used by the Marx Brothers and W.C. Fields. It has also been the set for The Cosby Show and Sesame Street. The recently constructed Steiner Studios is a 15 acre (61,000 m²) modern movie studio complex in a former shipyard where The Producers and The Inside Man, a Spike Lee movie, were filmed.

Silvercup Studios revealed plans in February 2006 for a new $1 billion complex with eight soundstages, production and studio support space, offices for media and entertainment companies, stores, 1,000 apartments in high-rise towers, a catering hall and a cultural institution. The project is envisioned as a "vertical Hollywood" designed by Lord Richard Rogers, the architect of the Pompidou Center in Paris and the Millennium Dome in London. It is to be built at the edge of the East River in Queens and will be the largest production house on the East Coast. Steiner Studios in Brooklyn would still have the largest single soundstage, however. Kaufman Studios plans its own expansion in the future.

Miramax Films, a Big Ten film studio, is the largest motion picture distribution and production company headquartered in the city. Many smaller independent producers and distributors are also in New York. It is the home of HIT Entertainment, headquartered in the Upper East Side area in Manhattan.

Top publicly traded companies in New York City

NYC
rank

US
rank

World
rank

Company Revenues
(millions)

Employees
(worldwide)

Industry group
1 13 36 J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. $115,475 239,831 Commercial Banks
2 14 39 Citigroup $111,055 260,000 Commercial Banks
3 16 41 Verizon Communications $106,565 194,400 Telecommunications
4 17 44 American International Group $104,417 63,000 Property and Casualty Insurance (stock)
5 31 103 Pfizer $67,809 110,600 Pharmaceuticals
6 46 174 MetLife $52,717 54,000 Life and Health Insurance (stock)
7 51 176 INTL FCStone IAM $46,940 729 Diversified Financials
8 54 181 Goldman Sachs Group $45,967 38,700 Commercial Banks [formerly Securities]
9 63 218 Morgan Stanley $39,320 62,542 Commercial Banks [formerly Securities]
10 71 258 New York Life Insurance $34,947 16,068 Life and Health Insurance (mutual)
11 74 263 Hess $34,613 13,776 Petroleum Refining
12 83 284 News Corporation $32,778 51,000 Entertainment
13 87 296 TIAA-CREF $32,225 7,312 Life and Health Insurance (mutual)
14 91 319 American Express $30,242 61,000 Commercial Banks
15 94 331 Philip Morris International $27,208 78,300 Tobacco
16 95 274 Time Warner $26,888 31,000 Entertainment
17 106 389 Travelers Companies $25,112 32,000 Property and Casualty Insurance (stock)
18 127 465 Alcoa $21,013 59,000 Metals
19 131 Bristol-Myers Squibb $19,484 27,000 Pharmaceuticals
20 137 Time Warner Cable $18,868 47,030 Telecommunications
21 159 L-3 Communications $15,680 63,000 Aerospace and Defense
22 160 Colgate-Palmolive $15,680 39,200 Household and Personal Products
23 165 The Bank of New York Mellon $14,929 48,000 Commercial Banks
24 168 Loews $14,621 18,400 Property and Casualty Insurance (stock)
25 174 CBS $14,060 25,380 Entertainment
26 180 Viacom $13,497 10,900 Entertainment
27 184 Consolidated Edison $13,325 15,180 Utilities: Gas and Electric
28 195 Omnicom Group $12,543 65,500 Advertising, Marketing
29 225 Marsh & McLennan $10,931 51,000 Diversified Financials
30 226 Avon Products $10,863 42,000 Household and Personal Products
31 245 Guardian Life Insurance $10,051 4,812 Life and Health Insurance (mutual)
32 256 KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) $9,668 698 Securities
33 270 Icahn Enterprises $9,119 56,647 Motor Vehicles and Parts
34 282 BlackRock $8,612 9,127 Securities
35 285 Assurant $8,528 13,938 Property and Casualty Insurance (stock)
36 307 Estée Lauder $7,796 31,200 Household and Personal Products
37 355 Interpublic Group of Companies $6,532 41,000 Advertising, Marketing
38 364 CIT Group $6,363 3,778 Commercial Banks
39 372 McGraw-Hill $6,168 21,000 Publishing, Printing
40 374 Virgin Media $6,138 12,350 Telecommunications
41 395 Barnes & Noble $5,811 35,000 Specialty Retailers (books)
42 446 Foot Locker $5,049 25,348 Specialty Retailers: apparel
43 451 Polo Ralph Lauren $4,979 19,000 Apparel
44 479 Phillips-Van Heusen $4,637 16,600 Apparel
45 495 NYSE Euronext NYSE $4,425 2,968 Securities
Notes: IAM: formerly International Assets Management; NYSE: operates the New York Stock Exchange & other exchanges
Sources: Fortune 500 website, Fortune Global 500 website and Fortune, Volume 163, Number 7 (May 23, 2011)

Ranked by revenues in the fiscal year that ended before February 1, 2011. World rank based on the Fortune Global 500's revenues for the fiscal year that ended before April 1, 2011.

See also

References

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    & Vol. 163, no. 7 (May 23, 2011), pages F-41 and F-45.
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  27. ^ Tri-State Biodiesel :: Fuel of the Future... Today
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