United States - Wholesale trade: merchant wholesalers (NAICS 42) - sales of establishments with payroll, 2007 by State

Data Item
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Chart.
Wholesale trade: merchant wholesalers (NAICS 42) - sales of establishments with payroll, 2007 - (Thousands of USD)
State Value
Alabama 52,252,752
Alaska 4,563,605
Arizona 57,573,459
Arkansas 29,659,789
California 598,456,486
Colorado 53,598,986
Connecticut 107,917,037
Delaware 5,727,401
District of Columbia 2,117,990
Florida 221,641,518
Georgia 141,962,359
Hawaii 8,894,672
Idaho 14,286,715
Illinois 231,082,768
Indiana 67,634,947
Iowa 41,068,338
Kansas 45,863,865
Kentucky 74,680,759
Louisiana 51,415,553
Maine 8,823,719
Maryland 51,276,797
Massachusetts 95,275,672
Michigan 107,109,349
Minnesota 82,878,056
Mississippi 23,003,585
Missouri 81,032,913
Montana 8,202,782
Nebraska 24,019,868
Nevada 19,255,893
New Hampshire 14,564,458
New Jersey 233,413,004
New Mexico 10,589,286
New York 313,461,904
North Carolina 88,795,885
North Dakota 13,099,348
Ohio 135,575,279
Oklahoma 48,074,682
Oregon 51,910,777
Pennsylvania 142,859,202
Rhode Island 9,182,788
South Carolina 40,498,047
South Dakota 11,400,476
Tennessee 80,116,528
Texas 424,238,194
Utah 25,417,368
Vermont 5,121,694
Virginia 60,513,396
Washington 76,790,966
West Virginia 11,036,467
Wisconsin 59,996,244
Wyoming 6,352,890

Value for the US (Thousands of USD): 4,174,286,516

Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Economic Census, 2002. Updated every 5 years. http://www.census.gov/econ/census02

Definitions:

The wholesale trade sector comprises establishments engaged in wholesaling merchandise, generally without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise. The wholesaling process is an intermediate step in the distribution of merchandise. Wholesalers are organized to sell or arrange the purchase or sale of goods for resale (i.e., goods sold to other wholesalers or retailers), capital or durable nonconsumer goods, or raw and intermediate materials and supplies used in production. Wholesalers sell merchandise to other businesses and normally operate from a warehouse or office.

The 2002 Economic Census classifies businesses according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), 2002.

Sales includes merchandise sold for cash or credit by establishments primarily engaged in wholesale trade; receipts from rental of vehicles, equipment, instruments, tools, etc.; receipts for delivery, installation, maintenance, repair, alteration, storage, and other services; gasoline, liquor, tobacco, and other excise taxes that are paid by the manufacturer and passed on to the wholesaler; and shipping and handling receipts.

Sales are net after deductions for refunds and allowances for merchandise returned by customers. Trade-in allowances are not deducted from sales. Sales do not include carrying or other credit charges; sales and other taxes (including Hawaii''s General Excise Tax) collected from customers and forwarded to taxing authorities; and nonoperating income from such sources as investments, rental or sales of real estate, and interest.

Sales do not include wholesale sales made by manufacturers, retailers, service establishments, or other businesses whose primary activity is other than wholesale trade. They do include receipts other than from the sale of merchandise at wholesale, e.g., service receipts, retail sales, etc., by establishments primarily engaged in wholesale trade.

Scope and Methodology:

The 2002 Economic Census measured activity during calendar year 2002. Large- and medium-size firms, including all firms known to operate more than one establishment, and a sample of small employers were sent questionnaires to be completed and returned to the Census Bureau by mail. Most very small firms were not sent a form, and data from existing administrative records of other Federal agencies were used instead.

These data include only establishments with paid employees.

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