Innovation New Jersey
  • Home
  • Our Coalition
    • Contact Us
  • News
  • Resources
    • State Supports
    • Federal Supports
    • Higher Ed Supports
  • Join Us

Innovation News

Everything Innovation. Everything New Jersey.
Follow us and stay connected.

Incentives and Small Business in NJ: At Issue with NJBIA

1/6/2018

0 Comments

 
Trenton, NJ - The NJ Economic Development Authority (EDA) has a well-deserved reputation as a major player in the state’s efforts to attract high profile companies. Its incentive packages were crucial in bringing the Philadelphia 76ers practice facility to Camden, and kept companies like Subaru from moving to other states. In fact, EDA is the primary source for the incentives to bring Amazon’s second headquarters to Newark.
The bulk of EDA’s efforts, however, involve working with small and medium-size businesses. In the last few months, EDA has helped a 75-employee snack manufacturer relocate to Piscataway, expand a distribution facility in Jersey City, and settle a 128-employee consumer products testing firm in Fairfield.
These kinds of projects don’t generate big headlines, but they do play a big role in the economy. In 2015, EDA provided $32 million to 55 small companies through its small business lending programs. Those businesses are expected to create more than 550 new jobs and leverage more than $122 million in investments.
Even very small businesses in urban downtowns like Paterson and Passaic can benefit. EDA’s Garden State Growth Zone program provides qualified businesses help with their annual lease payments or incentives to grow and expand.

EDA is also essential in growing our innovation ecosystem.

EDA’s Technology Business Tax Certificate Transfer Program is a perfect example of how to make New Jersey more competitive in the innovation economy. It allows qualified, unprofitable technology or biotechnology companies to sell a percentage of their net operating losses and research and development tax credits to profitable corporations. This allows the companies to offset their losses and raise capital for their current operations. In November, EDA approved such transfers for 39 tech companies representing $46 million.

Then there’s the Angel Investor Tax Credit Program; in 2016, the state approved 251 applications through the program, which represented over $96 million in private capital into technology and life sciences companies throughout the Garden State. The tax credits are aimed at investors who come through with the final funding to help a startup get into production or get products and services to market.

NJBIA has been successful in advocating for more access to EDA programs, such as the Economic Opportunity Act of 2013, which revised job-creation and investment thresholds so more businesses could participate. Additionally, NJBIA worked with lawmakers in 2017 to extend the successful Angel Investor Tax Credit Program to holding companies. The change will make it easier for high-tech businesses to attract investments in their companies and provide technology startups with the capital they need to bring their products to the marketplace.

A big reason the EDA is so dynamic is the leadership shown by longtime Executive Director Caren Franzini. During her tenure at the agency, she spearheaded efforts that produced a renewed state focus on the needs of small businesses and entrepreneurs. She left EDA in 2012 to start her own business, and, as a business owner, joined NJBIA’s board of directors before passing away in 2016. She left such a deep imprint, however, that the Legislature and Governor officially renamed EDA headquarters the “Caren Franzini Memorial Building.”

​The agency maintains the legacy she left. EDA has played a major role in the resurgence of Camden, Trenton and Newark, and in the success of businesses of all sizes and in all industries. After all, no economic development strategy is complete unless it accounts for the growth of small businesses.
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Do not miss a single innovative moment and sign up for our newsletter!
    Weekly updates


    Categories

    All
    3D Printing
    Academia
    Acquisitions
    Aerospace
    Agriculture
    AIDS
    Algae
    Alumni
    Animals
    Architecture
    Astrophysics
    Autism
    Awards
    Big Data
    Bioethics
    Biofuel
    Biomedical
    BioNJ
    Bioterrorism
    Bit Coins
    Brain Health
    Business
    Camden
    Cancer
    CCollege
    Cellular
    Centenary
    Chemistry
    ChooseNJ
    Climate Change
    Clinical Trials
    Cloud Tech
    Collaboration
    Computing
    Congress
    Coriell
    Council On Innovation
    Crowdfunding
    Cybersecurity
    DARPA
    Defense
    Degree
    Dementia
    Dental Health
    DOC
    DOD
    DOE
    Drew
    Drones
    Drug Creation
    Einstein's Alley
    Electricity
    Energy
    Engineering
    Entrepreneurship
    Environmental
    FAA
    Fairleigh Dickinson
    FDA
    Federal Budget
    Federal Government
    Federal Labs
    Federal Program
    Finance
    Food Science
    Fort Monmouth
    Fuel Cells
    Funding
    Genome
    Geography
    Geology
    Global Competition
    Google
    Governor Christie
    Grant
    Hackensack
    HackensackUMC
    Health Care
    Healthcare
    HHS
    HINJ
    Hospitals
    Immigration
    Incubator
    Infrastructure
    International
    Internet
    Investor
    IoT
    IP
    IT
    Jobs
    Johnson & Johnson
    K-12
    Kean
    Kessler
    Legislation
    Logistics
    Manufacturing
    Medical Devices
    Med School
    Mental Health
    Mentor
    Microorganisms
    Molecular Biology
    Montclair
    NAS
    Neuroscience
    Newark
    New Jersey
    NIFA
    NIH
    NIST
    NJBDA
    NJBIA
    NJ Chemistry Council
    NJCU
    NJDOLWD
    NJEDA
    NJEDge
    NJHF
    NJII
    NJIT
    NJMEP
    NJPAC
    NJPRO
    NJTC
    Nonprofit
    NSF
    OpEd
    Open Data
    OSHE
    OSTP
    Parasite
    Patents
    Paterson
    Patients
    Perth Amboy
    Pharma
    POTUS
    PPPL
    Princeton
    Prosthetics
    Ranking
    Rare Disease
    R&D Council
    Report
    Resiliency
    Rider
    Robotics
    Rowan
    Rutgers
    SBA
    Seton Hall
    Siemens
    Smart Car
    Smart Cities
    Software
    Solar
    Space
    SSTI
    Startup
    State Government
    STEM
    Stevens
    Stockton
    Subatomic
    Supports
    Sustainability
    Taxes
    TCNJ
    Teachers
    Telecom
    Therapy
    Thermodynamics
    Transportation
    Undergraduate
    USEDA
    Verizon
    Video Game
    Virtual Reality
    Water
    WHO
    William Paterson
    Women In STEM
    Workforce Development

Home   Coalition   News   Resources   Events   Join Us
Picture
Innovation New Jersey Coalition
10 West Lafayette Street
Trenton, NJ 08608
732-729-9619