Garden State Equality is New Jersey’s largest advocacy organization. Since Garden State Equality's founding in 2004, New Jersey has enacted 210 laws at the state, county and municipal levels to advance the rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. That's more LGBT civil rights laws enacted in less time than in any other U.S. state – ever. A 2009 year-end study by www.eQualityGiving.com ranks New Jersey as #1 in the United States for LGBT civil rights, tied with California, Iowa and Vermont. In 2008, Garden State Equality became the first statewide civil rights organization in America to be showcased in an Academy Award®-winning film. "Garden State Equality has run the most effective grassroots campaign New Jersey has seen in years," the Star-Ledger has written. Next we will win a marriage equality statute to replace our state's failed civil union law. So welcome to Garden State Equality, a movement making history. We're glad you're here.



gse
gse gse twitterfacebook you tube join us gse gse
gse

THE LATEST


EQUALITY WALKS
at 2:00pm on Sundays
September 12, 19 and 26
across New Jersey.
Click here.

Updates on the
Dean Gaymon case.
Click here.

gse issues volunteer contact officials

you are here: home > issues > new jersey's economy

issues

 

NEW JERSEY'S ECONOMY

Why bother dealing with marriage equality in this economic recession?   Because now is when New Jersey needs marriage equality the most.   Marriage equality would provide tax-free economic relief to the entire state, including you.
 
An independent study of New Jersey’s economy by The Williams Institute at UCLA Law School demonstrates that when New Jersey enacts marriage equality, “spending on tourism and weddings by same-sex couples would boost New Jersey’s economy by $248 million” over the next three years.  See page 7 of the Williams Institute report, The Impact of Extending Marriage to Same-Sex Couples on the New Jersey Budget.
 
The study predicts that half of New Jersey’s 21,178 same-sex couples will want to marry, leading to 10,589 weddings. Another 45,831 out-of-state couples are likely to travel to New Jersey to marry. This economic lift will also likely generate more 800 new jobs in the state.

"In a tough economic climate, marriage can directly benefit the New Jersey budget in a direct, tangible, and substantial way," explains economist M.V. Lee Badgett, co-author of the study and research director of The Williams Institute.

"The fiscal effects of same-sex marriage are undeniable, the sooner New Jersey expands marriage to same-sex couples, the sooner state and local governments receive much needed economic boosts," notes study co-author Brad Sears, executive director of the Williams Institute.

Marriage equality would certainly provide economic relief to same-sex couples.  When employers deny same-sex couples health benefits because the employers do not recognize civil unions as equal to marriage and thus disqualify employees’ partners from health coverage, the economic impact on families who have to pay for their health coverage during these tough times is devastating.  

Copyright © 2010 Garden State Equality. All rights reserved.
Website designed by Indigo 501 Creative.