Posts Tagged ‘Kauffman Foundation’
Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012
A new study by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation found that up to 39 percent of angel investors don’t even get a positive return on investment, meaning they end up losing money.
This statistic is important to any small business owner or entrepreneur seeking funding for their small business. Angel investors are one way that small businesses get funding.
Consequently, it is important for small business owners to know what’s going on with Angel investors in order to better sell their business model.
In the recent blog post “Angel Investing Described as a “Low ROI” Investment,” the Business Finance Store discusses new statistics on angel investing and how small businesses can use this information to their advantage.
If one assumes that angel investors read up on finance and understand the current business climate, then one would know that they’re looking for businesses offering as much of a guarantee on positive return on investment as possible.
More knowledge will always put small business owners and entrepreneurs at an advantage.
Read more about new statistics regarding angel investing and how to make the most of it at the Business Finance Store blog.
The Business Finance Store is a business financing and consulting firm that offers customized Business Financial Solutions.
Tags: angel investors, business finance, Kauffman Foundation Posted in best practices, Business advice, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Monday, October 31st, 2011
Using words like “uncertain,” “fragile” and “weak,” 96 percent of top economics bloggers now share a gloomy outlook on the U.S. economy. According to a new Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation survey released today, respondents’ expectations of higher annual deficits and top marginal tax rate increases, coupled with recession concerns, are a “depressing surprise.”
Personally, we suspect the U.S. economy is more resilient than this survey suggests. Recent figures showing the U.S. economy actually grew by 2.5percent in the third quarter – well out of recessionary territory. With holiday spending about to boost Q4 numbers, a double-dip recession seems less likely. Of course, deep cuts in federal spending loom and the world economic situation remains unsettled.
After you take a look at what the economics bloggers think, tell us what you think. Is the U.S. economy poised for a recovery or headed off a cliff?
For the final Kauffman Economic Outlook: A Quarterly Survey of Leading Economics Bloggers of 2011, the Kauffman Foundation sent invitations to more than 200 leading economics bloggers as identified in the Palgrave’s econolog.net rankings. The Foundation surveys the bloggers each quarter about their views of the economy, entrepreneurship and innovation.
Top economics bloggers’ preferred policy option to stimulate the economy (selected from a small set of options) is to “remove restrictions on who can be ‘accredited’ investors (allowed to invest in startups, recently raised to $1 million net worth by the Dodd-Frank Act),” with 80 percent support.
Rich and diverse viewpoints from bloggers
More than 70 percent of the participants support the approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline, an idea to open up more domestic areas to oil and gas exploration and drilling.
“The economics blogging community has proven to be very insightful with rich and diverse viewpoints, but by nature they understand the importance of entrepreneurship because that’s ultimately who they are,” said Tim Kane, Kauffman Foundation senior scholar.
“We’ve been fortunate to aggregate the insights of top economics bloggers, including expert scholars such as Jim Hamilton at UCSD and Brad Delong at UC Berkeley, but also popular commentators outside of the ivory tower, with powerful results.”
Research highlights include:
- A two-thirds majority of respondents believe the government is too involved in the economy, despite the largely non-partisan identification of panel members.
- Only 2 percent of leading economics bloggers assessed the U.S. economy’s overall condition as “strong and growing” — actually a slight improvement over last quarter, when no respondents gave this answer.
- The bloggers expect global output to rise faster than anything else. A significant difference from the previous reports is that only about 50 percent of respondents anticipate employment growth in the United States. Opinion remains split about expectations of higher poverty and inequality levels, with 5 percent believing that poverty is decreasing.
- When asked to consider the timeframe for the U.S. real estate market to stabilize and return to historically average home-price appreciation and foreclosure rates, only 4 percent believe the U.S. market will stabilize within twelve months while the vast majority sees a timeframe of four or more years.
- The concept of a gradual gas-tax increase for additional infrastructure spending was favored by 43 percent. Another 40 percent would increase the gas tax and put revenues toward reduction of the deficit or other taxes, while only 6 percent support an outright reduction of the gasoline tax.
The panel also revealed their poetic talents, rising to the survey’s first-ever challenge to describe the U.S. economy in haiku. Nearly 20 haiku were submitted and subsequently voted on by more than 500 public readers. The most popular was by Professor Art Diamond :
jobs and Jobs are gone
need more Jobs to get more jobs
innovate to grow
Tags: economic stability, economics bloggers gloomy over U.S. economy, employment growth expected, gas tax increase, government involvement in economy, Kauffman Foundation, real estate market Posted in Blogging, Economic Development, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Friday, October 21st, 2011
The Internet’s profound effect on how U.S. businesses operate is even more pronounced among young companies, according to a research report released today by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
The study, “Casting a Wide Net: Online Activities of Small and New Businesses in the United States,” reveals that new businesses have a higher propensity to use websites, email, and to sell online, and that these inclinations have an impact on capitalization and longevity.
The research compares data from the Kauffman Firm Survey, which follows 4,928 firms from their founding in 2004 through 2009, with recently released data from various government sources on businesses overall.
New businesses go digital faster than older ones
While adoption and use of online activities differed depending on the business type, owner characteristics, industry and other factors, the study showed that new businesses tended to implement e-business activities at higher rates than existing businesses did.
In 2007, for example, young businesses were more likely than not to have a website, as compared to only about a quarter of U.S. businesses overall. Six percent of all U.S. businesses had online sales that year, while more than 25 percent of young businesses were selling online.
“Startup companies often are at the forefront of technology implementation that streamlines productivity and gives them a competitive advantage in the marketplace,” said Alicia Robb, Kauffman Foundation Senior Research Fellow and co-author of the report.
In addition to new businesses’ higher likelihood of selling online, new businesses were also much more likely to generate more than half of company sales online. Among online sellers, a quarter of young businesses generated more than 50 percent of their revenues online, almost double the rate seen in the general business population.
“It’s clear that many young businesses are integrating online sales into their strategies for reaching customers and generating revenues,” said E.J. Reedy, Kauffman Foundation Research Fellow and report co-author. “But it’s important to realize that in addition to Internet-only sellers, many young businesses also report sales generated through other channels.”
Online businesses started bigger
New businesses that used websites, email and online sales generally were starting bigger, with greater financial capitalization at birth (almost $55,000 more if a firm had a website, almost $46,000 more if the business owner had email and more than $25,000 more if the firm later reported online sales) and also higher levels of employment, especially for firms starting with a website.
Founders whose companies had websites at startup tended to be younger and more educated than were founders who did not have websites. They more frequently had previous entrepreneurial experience but less industry work experience, and were dedicating about eight more hours per week to the venture than were entrepreneurs whose companies launched without a website.
High-tech startups were most likely to begin operations with websites and email, but were no more likely to be selling online than were non-high-tech companies. Across industry types, companies in Manufacturing; Wholesale Trade; Professional Services; Retail Trade; Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate (FIRE); and Arts, Entertainment and Recreation were most likely to begin business with websites and email. The lowest level of Internet sales was among Professional Services and FIRE.
Tags: business adoption of online activities, Kauffman Firm Survey, Kauffman Foundation, new business use of the Internet Posted in Economic Development, entrepreneurship, Internet/New Media, IT, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Wednesday, May 4th, 2011
 artist's rendering of the American Undergroun at the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, NC
DURHAM, NC – Durham’s LaunchBox Digital is the only Southeast firm, unless you count two in Texas, to make a list of the top 15 U.S. Startup Accelerators by Tech Cocktail.
The list, compiled as part of filed work for the Kauffman Fellows program by Aziz Gilani in partnership with Tech Cocktail and Kellogg School of Management, weighed financing events, the success of companies funded after completing the program, and program characteristics to establish the rankings.
TechStars Boulder edged out Y Combinator for the top position, while Chicago’s Excelerate Labs and LaunchBox Digital were very close as the third and fourth top programs.
Others, in order, are: TechStars Boston, Kicklabs, San Francisco, TechStars Seattle, Tech Wildcatter, Dallas, DreamIt Ventures, Philadelphia, The Brandery, Cincinnati, OH, Capital Factory, Austin, NYC SeedStart, Betaspring, Providence, RI, BoomStartup, Salt Lake City, UT, and AlphaLab, Pittsburgh, PA.
We recently reported on LaunchBox startup Spring Metrics, which landed seed funding and moved to larger offices in downtown Durham not long after joining the program. Spring Metrics CEO Doug Kaufman recently told us the accerlerator, located in the American Underground in the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, was essential to its quick start and ability to get seed funding.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: American Tobacco Campus, American Underground, and AlphaLab, Austin, Aziz Gilani, Betaspring, BoomStartup, Capital Factory, Cincinnati, Dallas, DreamIt Ventures, Kauffman Foundation, Kicklabs, LaunchBox Digital, NYC SeedStart, OH, PA, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Providence, RI, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Tech Cocktail, Tech Wildcatter, TechStars Boston, TechStars Seattle, The Brandery, top U.S. accelerators, UT Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, North Carolina, Studies, surveys, reports | 1 Comment »
Thursday, March 31st, 2011
KANSAS CITY, KN – Google (Nasdaq:GOOG) will build its first high speed broadband network called Google Fiber in Kansas City, Kansas in 2012, the search engine firm says. The company disclosed the choice on its official blog
More than 1,100 cities vied for the much coveted Google Fiber project, which will provide Internet speeds of 1 gigabit a second, more than 100 times faster than most current U.S. broadband connections.
Google said, “In selecting a city, our goal was to find a location where we could build efficiently, make an impact on the community and develop relationships with local government and community organizations. We’ve found this in Kansas City. We’ll be working closely with local organizations including the Kauffman Foundation, KCNext, and the University of Kansas Medical Center, to help develop the gigabit applications of the future.”
Other cities may also get their chance at having Google bring ultra high speed broadband to their municipalities, according to Goggle’s Vice President of Access Services, Milo Medin. Medin wrote in the blog post that “Over the coming months we’ll be talking to interested cities about the possibility of us bringing ultra high speed broadband to their communities.”
Many cities in the Southeast submitted proposals seeking to be Google’s first choice for the Google Fiber project.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Google blog, Google choses Kansas City for highspeed broadband, Google Fiber, Kauffman Foundation, KCNext, Milo Medin Posted in Google, Internet/New Media | Comments Off
Thursday, February 17th, 2011
 Scott Case
WASHINGTON, DC – The Startup America Partnership, the private sector alliance launched at the White House on January 31st to celebrate and accelerate entrepreneurship, has named Timothy “Scott” Case CEO.
Scott is currently CEO of Malaria No More (www.MalariaNoMore.org), a public-private partnership he helped start in 2006 to end malaria deaths in Africa by 2015, and will remain with the organization as a Vice Chair.
“I’ve been an entrepreneur my entire life and have helped build hyper growth companies that transformed the lives of employees, customers, and clients.” said Scott Case. “I’ve also experienced the challenges entrepreneurs face firsthand as they seek to build great companies. I’m delighted to lead the Startup America Partnership as I believe driving American entrepreneurship is critical to creating jobs and sustaining our nation’s global leadership.”
Prior to Malaria No More, Scott was involved in several entrepreneurial startups, including Priceline, the “name your own price” company that was one of only a handful of startups in US history to reach a billion dollars in annual sales in less than 24 months.
As co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, he was responsible for building the technology that enabled Priceline’s hyper-growth. Previously, Scott helped build a portfolio of intellectual property at the Walker Digital Invention Laboratory, and is a named inventor on dozens of U.S. patents. Scott also co-founded Precision Training Software, a software company that developed the world’s first PC-based simulated flight instructor and photo-realistic flight simulator.
The Startup America Partnership is an alliance of the country’s most innovative entrepreneurs, corporations, universities, foundations, and other private sector leaders working to dramatically increase the prevalence and success of high-growth enterprises in the U.S.
The Partnership was created as an independent, private-sector response to President Obama’s Startup America initiative, a White House campaign to celebrate, inspire, and accelerate high-growth entrepreneurship throughout the nation. AOL co-founder Steve Case chairs the partnership and the Kauffman and Case Foundations are founding partners, providing initial funding and strategic guidance. For more information on the Partnership, visit www.startupamericapartnership.organd follow at www.twitter.com/startupamerica and www.facebook.com/startupamerica.
The Startup America program has already been criticized as too much hype and no beef, although it has just launched.
Personally, we think anything that helps focus attention on the job creation potential and critical innovations of startup companies as opposed to say, pumping money into financial institutions that helped cause the recent recession, is a good thing.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Case Foundation, Kauffman Foundation, Scott Case named CEO, Startup America, Steve Case Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 27th, 2010
CHAPEL HILL, NC – A new program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will provide business and technical expertise to UNC startup companies. The Innovation Fellowship Program will help launch and grow early stage university startups as well as build entrepreneurial talent for the Research Triangle Park region by funding two-year Innovation Fellows to work with fledgling companies.
Carolina was one of three universities designated by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation today as “Kauffman Commercialization Leaders.” The award recognizes UNC, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Missouri System for their creative approaches to help to accelerate the process of bringing student and faculty innovations to market.
The Kauffman Foundation is awarding each university a $100,000 grant for their selected programs or initiatives.
“These universities exhibit a strong commitment to bringing the innovations developed on campuses into the commercial marketplace, which benefits society and ultimately enhances economic growth,” said Carl J. Schramm, Kauffman Foundation president and chief executive officer. “We are very pleased to recognize and support their efforts.”
Additional funding
Additional funding came from UNC’s Translational and Clinical Sciences (TrACS) Institute, one of 55 medical research institutions working together as a national consortium to improve the way biomedical research is conducted across the country. Carolina KickStart, a core program of TraCS that fosters the building and launching of UNC startups, will administer the program.
“These fellowships help fill a significant talent gap for early stage companies commercializing important technologies,” said Judith Cone, special assistant for entrepreneurship and innovation to UNC Chancellor Holden Thorp. “This program is just one part of the effort to help UNC become one of the most innovative and entrepreneurial campuses in the nation.”
First fellow named
The first Innovation Fellow is John Strenkowski, a UNC alumnus and recent Harvard Business School graduate. “John has a passion for startups and is ideally suited to work with these early-stage companies,” said Don Rose, director of Carolina KickStart. “He will be an important catalyst to get these companies launched and in a position for success.”
The program targets young entrepreneurial talent. Certain Innovation Fellows will have a business background and will provide important business leadership for the startups: developing the business strategy, negotiating a license to the technology and securing startup capital. Other Innovation Fellows will bring technical expertise to the startup.
Because having a good working knowledge of the fledgling technology is important, the source of the technical fellows will be recently graduated doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers working in the lab where the technology originated. The fellowship will support transition to the startup as they provide technology development and scientific leadership: securing Small Business Innovation Research funding, creating a product development plan and designing and testing prototypes.
Hatteras Venture Partners to provide seed capital
To further enhance the program, venture capital firms will invest in the companies with an Innovation Fellow. Hatteras Venture Partners, a venture capital firm based in Research Triangle Park with a focus on biopharmaceuticals, medical devices, diagnostics and related opportunities in human medicine, has agreed to provide seed capital to a fellow-led UNC startup.
“Successful startups need three things: good ideas, talented individuals and capital. UNC has brought the first two together and our hope is that our investment will increase the likelihood of success for these startups,” said Clay Thorp, managing partner at Hatteras.
“We sincerely hope others will join us in providing seed capital for these companies and new ideas. The Innovation Fellows effort is an excellent opportunity to drive innovation and develop the region’s entrepreneurial leaders of tomorrow.”
The Innovation Fellowship Program supports one of the five major recommendations in the Innovate@Carolina Roadmap, to “translate important new ideas more expediently and at an increased volume into innovations that improve society.” The Innovate@Carolina initiative also calls for an expansion of the KickStart program campus-wide.
Tags: Clay Thorp, Hatteras Venture Partners, Innovation Fellowship Program, John Strenkowski, Kauffman Foundation, UNC Chapel Hill Posted in Carolinas, Money, North Carolina, University Tech | Comments Off
Thursday, June 17th, 2010
WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to hand down a decision affecting the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) act of 2002 soon. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act more than quadrupled corporate auditing costs for public corporations. Passed in response to the slack auditing that allowed companies such as Enron to appear healthy when they were not, SOX proved so costly that some public companies went private again, while it also reduced the number of companies going public.
That effect is still being felt in the venture financing industry, where a successful IPO is a coveted exit. We’ve heard from a number of smaller venture-backed firms that the cost of going public now means they aimed at a merger or acquisition exit from the start rather than for an IPO.
The case before the Supreme Court, says the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) whose attorneys are service as co-counsel, mounts a constitutional challenge to the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB), the accounting regulatory body created by the law.
Negative impact on entrepreneurs
The CEI argues that the way in which the PCAOB board members are appointed violates the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution. Namely, that PCAOB officers, who wield a great deal of regulatory power over businesses and industry-wide accounting practices, are “principal officers of the United States” who must be appointed by the President, with advice and consent of the Senate or by an agency head, as required by the Appointments Clause.
CEI says, “This requirement was intended by the Framers to instill a high level of accountability for officials who wield such vast powers. Although the PCAOB is a striking constitutional anomaly – a case of an independent agency (Securities and Exchange Commission) appointing an equally powerful independent agency – it’s a case that will also potentially change, for the better, how other government officials and regulatory bodies are answerable to the American people.”
CEI notes that SOX has had a negative impact on entrepreneurs and inventors.
Fewer IPOS
CEI says SOX permanently reduced the number of companies going public, increased the size of companies going public, and had a negative effect on job creation and economic growth. It also caused many foreign firms to stop listing on U.S. exchanges.
According to a 2009 Renaissance Capital report, IPO issuance in 2008 and 2009 is lower than any period since the 1970s, when business creation struggled against inflation, high interest rates and the Vietnam War.
Also, data compiled by Jay Ritter of the University of Florida show the number of U.S. IPOs were lower in every year after SOX was enacted in 2002 (2003 to present) than in every year of the decade from 1991 to 2000, including the early ’90s recession years. For instance, in the post-SOX boom year of 2006, there were 162 U.S. IPOs. Yet in 1991, a year when the U.S. was mired in recession but did not have SOX, there were 295 U.S. IPOs.
Bigger IPOs
The sheer size of companies going public has also increased, in large part because a company needs to be pretty big to afford the accounting costs that have shot up fourfold as a result of SOX, according to a summary of research in the Sarbanes-Oxley Compliance Journal.
According to Business Week, the median market cap (as measured by number of shares times share price) for a company doing an IPO was $52 million in the mid-‘90s. Today, it has shot up $227 million. Google had a $1 billion market cap when it went public of 2004. And Facebook still hasn’t gone public, despite having an estimated market cap of nearly $10 billion.
That means, says CEI, that budding Microsofts can no longer go public to raise money for growth. They must wait until they’re as big as a Google to go public. That forces firms to seek financing through debt, which is especially difficult in the current credit crunch.
CEI notes that evidence suggests that we were able to recover more quickly from the early ‘90s recession because an actual increase in companies — from Starbucks to Cisco — issuing IPOs. But SOX forecloses that possibility and makes for a longer recovery.
Accountants full employment act?
CEI also maintains that the PCAOB has stretched Sarbox’s requirement that auditors “attest” to a company’s internal controls over financial reporting in the law’s Section 404 to require a full-blown audit of trivial items that could remotely effect a financial statement. “This has turned the law into the “Accountants Full Employment Act” and the reason the Big 4 accounting firms lobby so hard against even minor rollbacks in Congress,” says CEI’s John Berlan, director of its Center for Entrepreneurs and Investors in a memo.
SOX was Hell for a company like Google
Even companies large enough to mount and IPO such as Google, faced difficulties with SOX.
According to John Battelle’s book The Search, considered a definitive history of Google Inc., Sarbox was “hell for a company like Google, which made its money literally pennies at a time, from millions upon millions of micro-transactions.”
Battelle reports that Sarbox compliance significantly delayed Google’s IPO. “According to engineers involved in the work, Google had to significantly restructure its advertising report system from the ground up.” If this was difficult for a company like Google, imagine what a burden it is to smaller companies.
SOX ineffective in fighting fraud
University of Minnesota accounting professor Ivy Zhang found that the law has cost the American economy $1.4 trillion in direct and indirect costs.
Almost as important is that Zhang and other researches have found that Sarbox has had no quantifiable benefits in fighting fraud. The PCAOB has done little or nothing about in telling accountants how to handle accounting for the off-balance sheet entities at issue in Enron that resurfaced with Lehman and other companies. Countrywide Financial, now charged by the SEC with accounting fraud, actually won an award for its Sarbox compliance from the Institute of Internal Auditors in 2007.
There is bipartisan support in Congress for regulatory relief from SOX.
For more see also:
Peter Thiel, venture capitalist and first outside investor in Facebook, “The IPO window is almost closed and I think in part, this is a response to Sarbanes-Oxley to the ways in which being the CEO of a public company is simply no fun anymore. They’re subject to insane levels of scrutiny. You’re not able to pursue any sort of multi-year corporate strategy and instead you are held to a quarter-by-quarter earnings schedule which is ultimately quite detrimental to long-term planning.” bigthink.com/ideas/17716
Carl Schramm and Robert Litan, president and vice president of Kauffman Foundation, leading foundation on research in entrepreneurship: “Compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, in particular, has proven to be far more expensive for smaller companies than originally intended or forecasted. Since shareholders are the intended beneficiaries of Sarbox, why not let them vote on whether their company needs to comply with some or all of its provisions—the expensive requirement for auditing of internal controls, in particular.
We suspect that many shareholders would choose some form of opt-out, and in so doing, would enable more growing companies to continue growing as independent firms, rather than being bought out by larger companies that can intentionally or unintentionally rob the firms of the entrepreneurial magic that made them successful in the first place.” online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704013004574517303668357682.html
Commentary on the Daily Caller: Sarbox reform would boost our economy, but even small reforms (such as small company exemptions) are being blocked by the powerful accounting lobby: dailycaller.com/2010/02/02/obama-can-aid-small-businesses-by-providing-regulatory-relief/
CEI study, “SOXing It To The Little Guy,” detailing Sarbox’s cost to Main Street entrepreneurs and investors.
Jack Welch, General Electric CEO responsible for turnaround in 80s and 90s. ”Small companies with all these financial controls that are in there now and the penalties that go on with small entrepreneurial companies, it’s tough.” Interview with Tavis Smiley.www.pbs.org/kcet/tavissmiley/archive/200504/20050426_welch.html
Tags: Carl Schramm, CEI, Countrywide Financial, facebook, General Electric, Google, Ivy Zhang, Jack Welch, John Battelle, Kauffman Foundation, Peter Thiel, Robert Litan, SOX, Supreme Court ruling on Sarbanes-Oxley Act, University of Florida Posted in Alabama, Arkansas, Carolinas, Economic Development, Florida, Georgia, Government/Defense, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Other SE, Potomac, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington, DC, West Virginia | Comments Off
Thursday, May 20th, 2010
KANSAS CITY, MO – Rather than making history for its deep recession and record unemployment, 2009 might instead be remembered as the year business startups reached their highest level in 14 years – even exceeding the number of startups during the peak 1999-2000 technology boom.
According to the Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity, a leading indicator of new-business creation in the United States, the number of new businesses created during the 2007–2009 recession years increased steadily year to year. In 2009, the 340 out of 100,000 adults who started businesses each month represent a 4 percent increase over 2008, or 27,000 more starts per month than in 2008 and 60,000 more starts per month than in 2007.
“Challenging economic times can serve as a motivational boost to individuals who have been laid-off to become their own employers and future job creators,”said Carl Schramm, president and CEO of the Kauffman Foundation. “Because entrepreneurs drive the economy, the growth in 2009 business startups is encouraging and hopefully points to a hopeful trend in terms of our economic recovery.”
Capturing new business owners in their first month of significant business activity, the Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity provides the earliest documentation of new-business development across the country.

The percentage of the adult, non-business-owner population that starts a business each month is measured using data from the monthly Current Population Survey (CPS), conducted by the U.S. Bureau of the Census and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
In addition to this overall rate of entrepreneurial activity, the Kauffman Index presents separate estimates for specific demographic groups, states and select metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs). It provides the only national measure of business creation by specific demographic groups.
New 2009 data allow for an update to previous reports, revealing important shifts in the national level of entrepreneurial activity, and in the demographic and geographic composition of new entrepreneurs across the country between 1996 and 2009. Interactive data spanning all 14 years is available at www.kauffman.org/kiea.
Tags: entrepreneurial activity, Kauffman Foundation, study Posted in Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
|
|
|