Unfortunately, in troubled economic times the language of recovery is too often tilted toward large, established companies or to "small businesses," a broad term that traditionally applies to businesses with fewer than 500 employees. The conventional wisdom is that such businesses account for half of the labor force and are therefore the engine of future job creation.From The Wall Street Journal article, "New Business, Not Small Business, Is What Creates Jobs" by Carl Schramm, Robert Litan And Dane Strangler.
That's not quite the case. The more precise factor is not the size of businesses, but rather their age. According to the Census Bureau, nearly all net job creation in the U.S. since 1980 occurred in firms less than five years old. A Kauffman Foundation report released yesterday shows that as recently as 2007, two-thirds of the jobs created were in such firms. Put more starkly, without new businesses, job creation in the American economy would have been negative for many years.
Correcting misconceptions about markets, economics, asset prices, derivatives, equities, debt and finance
Thursday, November 5, 2009
New, Not Small Businesses Create Jobs
Posted By Milton Recht
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