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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'proprietorship'

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Internal Revenue Service - 29

Center for Economic Studies - 26

Longitudinal Business Database - 25

Characteristics of Business Owners - 23

North American Industry Classification System - 20

Employer Identification Numbers - 17

Standard Industrial Classification - 17

Small Business Administration - 16

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 16

Economic Census - 15

County Business Patterns - 13

Business Register - 12

Business Dynamics Statistics - 11

Survey of Business Owners - 11

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 11

Kauffman Foundation - 10

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 10

National Science Foundation - 10

Federal Reserve System - 9

Census Bureau Business Register - 8

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 8

Service Annual Survey - 8

Social Security - 8

Federal Reserve Bank - 8

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 7

Social Security Administration - 7

American Community Survey - 7

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 7

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 7

Retail Trade - 6

Decennial Census - 6

Protected Identification Key - 6

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 6

Department of Homeland Security - 6

Current Population Survey - 6

Ordinary Least Squares - 6

Wholesale Trade - 5

Disclosure Review Board - 5

Arts, Entertainment - 5

Kauffman Firm Survey - 5

Company Organization Survey - 5

Business Employment Dynamics - 5

University of Maryland - 5

National Bureau of Economic Research - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Research Data Center - 5

Census of Retail Trade - 5

Board of Governors - 5

Technical Services - 4

Accommodation and Food Services - 4

Agriculture, Forestry - 4

National Employer Survey - 4

Health Care and Social Assistance - 4

Limited Liability Company - 4

Educational Services - 4

Social Security Number - 4

2010 Census - 4

Retirement History Survey - 4

Chicago RDC - 4

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 4

Russell Sage Foundation - 4

Department of Commerce - 4

Longitudinal Research Database - 4

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 3

Office of Management and Budget - 3

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 3

Core Based Statistical Area - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 3

New York Times - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Business Master File - 3

Postal Service - 3

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 3

PSID - 3

Census of Services - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

entrepreneur - 30

enterprise - 29

entrepreneurship - 27

entrepreneurial - 23

employed - 20

proprietor - 20

establishment - 18

growth - 17

venture - 16

corporation - 16

revenue - 15

sector - 13

employ - 13

recession - 13

employee - 12

sale - 10

ownership - 9

employment growth - 9

corporate - 9

minority - 9

company - 8

organizational - 8

econometric - 8

payroll - 8

quarterly - 7

labor - 7

hispanic - 7

nonemployer businesses - 7

acquisition - 7

earnings - 7

job growth - 6

workforce - 6

ethnicity - 6

startup - 6

gdp - 6

manufacturing - 6

firm growth - 6

financial - 6

characteristics businesses - 6

owned businesses - 6

finance - 5

firms grow - 5

firms employment - 5

population - 5

wealth - 5

longitudinal - 5

business survival - 5

small firms - 5

small businesses - 5

owner - 5

black - 5

incorporated - 4

borrower - 4

loan - 4

funding - 4

irs - 4

employment entrepreneurship - 4

job - 4

warehousing - 4

employment dynamics - 4

estimating - 4

survey - 4

founder - 4

endogeneity - 4

economically - 4

regression - 4

startup firms - 4

growth employment - 4

immigrant - 4

market - 4

franchising - 4

franchise - 4

specialization - 4

profit - 4

economic census - 4

employment data - 4

businesses census - 4

employment flows - 4

ethnic - 4

larger firms - 4

lawyer - 4

restaurant - 4

economist - 4

business owners - 4

production - 4

industrial - 4

bank - 3

lender - 3

metropolitan - 3

employment statistics - 3

citizen - 3

growth productivity - 3

younger firms - 3

profitability - 3

franchisor - 3

franchised businesses - 3

franchise establishments - 3

agency - 3

lending - 3

black business - 3

asian - 3

customer - 3

microdata - 3

firms size - 3

turnover - 3

Viewing papers 1 through 10 of 59


  • Working Paper

    Measuring the Business Dynamics of Firms that Received Pandemic Relief Funding: Findings from a New Experimental BDS Data Product

    January 2025

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-25-05

    This paper describes a new experimental data product from the U.S. Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies: the Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) of firms that received Small Business Administration (SBA) pandemic funding. This new product, BDS-SBA COVID, expands the set of currently published BDS tables by linking loan-level program participation data from SBA to internal business microdata at the U.S. Census Bureau. The linked programs include the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), COVID Economic Injury Disaster Loans (COVID-EIDL), the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF), and Shuttered Venue Operators Grants (SVOG). Using these linked data, we tabulate annual firm and establishment counts, measures of job creation and destruction, and establishment entry and exit for recipients and non-recipients of program funds in 2020-2021. We further stratify the tables by timing of loan receipt and loan size, and business characteristics including geography, industry sector, firm size, and firm age. We find that for the youngest firms that received PPP, the timing of receipt mattered. Receiving an early loan correlated with a lower job destruction rate compared to non-recipients and businesses that received a later loan. For the smallest firms, simply participating in PPP was associated with lower employment loss. The timing of PPP receipt was also related to establishment exit rates. For businesses of nearly all ages, those that received an early loan exited at a lower rate in 2022 than later loan recipients.
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  • Working Paper

    The Metamorphosis of Women Business Owners: A Focus on Age

    November 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-71

    Due to their growth, increasing performance, and significant contributions to the United States economy, women-owned businesses have spurred the interest of policymakers, researchers, and advocacy groups. Using various data products from the Census Bureau's Business Demographics Program, this study examines how women business ownership changes over time by age. We find that young owners experienced growth in ownership between 2012 and 2020 and that younger employer businesses were mostly owned by women under the age of 35 in 2021. We show that among women aged 45 to 54 and those aged 55 to 64 ownership rates declined 5.5% and 4.8% between 2012 and 2020, implying an acceleration in the drop out of entrepreneurship for mid to late career age groups. We also show that older owners operate most businesses in capital-intensive industries, had more prior businesses, and higher rates of selling their most recently started businesses. Finally, we find that age groups often characterized as childbearing ages found balancing work and family as key drivers of their decision to start a business.
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  • Working Paper

    Garage Entrepreneurs or just Self-Employed? An Investigation into Nonemployer Entrepreneurship

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-61

    Nonemployers, businesses without employees, account for most businesses in the U.S. yet are poorly understood. We use restricted administrative and survey data to describe nonemployer dynamics, overall performance, and performance by demographic group. We find that eventual outcome ' migration to employer status, continuing as a nonemployer, or exit ' is closely related to receipt growth. We provide estimates of employment creation by firms that began as nonemployers and become employers (migrants), estimating that relative to all firms born in 1996, nonemployer migrants accounted for 3-17% of all net jobs in the seventh year after startup. Moreover, we find that migrants' employment creation declined by 54% for the cohorts born between 1996 to 2014. Our results are consistent with increased adjustment frictions in recent periods, and suggest accessibility to transformative entrepreneurship for everyday Americans has declined.
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  • Working Paper

    The Business Dynamics Statistics: Describing the Evolution of the U.S. Economy from 1978-2019

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-33

    The U.S. Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) provide annual measures of how many businesses begin, end, or continue their operations and the associated job creation and destruction. The BDS is a valuable resource for information on the U.S. economy because of its long time series (1978-2019), its complete coverage (all private sector, non-farm U.S. businesses), and its tabulations for both individual establishments and the firms that own and control them. In this paper, we use the publicly available BDS data to describe the dynamics of the economy over the past 40 years. We highlight the increasing concentration of employment at old and large firms and describe net job creation trends in the manufacturing, retail, information, food/accommodations, and healthcare industry sectors. We show how the spatial distribution of employment has changed, first moving away from the largest cities and then back again. Finally, we show long-run trends for a group of industries we classify as high-tech and explore how the share of employment at small and young firms has changed for this part of the economy.
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  • Working Paper

    Matching State Business Registration Records to Census Business Data

    January 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-03

    We describe our methodology and results from matching state Business Registration Records (BRR) to Census business data. We use data from Massachusetts and California to develop methods and preliminary results that could be used to guide matching data for additional states. We obtain matches to Census business records for 45% of the Massachusetts BRR records and 40% of the California BRR records. We find higher match rates for incorporated businesses and businesses with higher startup-quality scores as assigned in Guzman and Stern (2018). Clerical reviews show that using relatively strict matching on address is important for match accuracy, while results are less sensitive to name matching strictness. Among matched BRR records, the modal timing of the first match to the BR is in the year in which the BRR record was filed. We use two sets of software to identify matches: SAS DQ Match and a machine-learning algorithm described in Cuffe and Goldschlag (2018). We find preliminary evidence that while the ML-based method yields more match results, SAS DQ tends to result in higher accuracy rates. To conclude, we provide suggestions on how to proceed with matching other states' data in light of our findings using these two states.
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  • Working Paper

    Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics (NES-D): Exploring Longitudinal Consistency and Sub-national Estimates

    December 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-34

    Until recently, the quinquennial Survey of Business Owners (SBO) was the only source of information for U.S. employer and nonemployer businesses by owner demographic characteristics such as race, ethnicity, sex and veteran status. Now, however, the Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics series (NES-D) will replace the SBO's nonemployer component with reliable, and more frequent (annual) business demographic estimates with no additional respondent burden, and at lower imputation rates and costs. NES-D is not a survey; rather, it exploits existing administrative and census records to assign demographic characteristics to the universe of approximately 25 million (as of 2016) nonemployer businesses. Although only in the second year of its research phase, NES-D is rapidly moving towards production, with a planned prototype or experimental version release of 2017 nonemployer data in 2020, followed by annual releases of the series. After the first year of research, we released a working paper (Luque et al., 2019) that assessed the viability of estimating nonemployer demographics exclusively with administrative records (AR) and census data. That paper used one year of data (2015) to produce preliminary tabulations of business counts at the national level. This year we expand that research in multiple ways by: i) examining the longitudinal consistency of administrative and census records coverage, and of our AR-based demographics estimates, ii) evaluating further coverage from additional data sources, iii) exploring estimates at the sub-national level, iv) exploring estimates by industrial sector, v) examining demographics estimates of business receipts as well as of counts, and vi) implementing imputation of missing demographic values. Our current results are consistent with the main findings in Luque et al. (2019), and show that high coverage and demographic assignment rates are not the exception, but the norm. Specifically, we find that AR coverage rates are high and stable over time for each of the three years we examine, 2014-2016. We are able to identify owners for approximately 99 percent of nonemployer businesses (excluding C-corporations), 92 to 93 percent of identified nonemployer owners have no missing demographics, and only about 1 percent are missing three or more demographic characteristics in each of the three years. We also find that our demographics estimates are stable over time, with expected small annual changes that are consistent with underlying population trends in the U.S.. Due to data limitations, these results do not include C-corporations, which represent only 2 percent of nonemployer businesses and 4 percent of receipts. Without added respondent burden and at lower imputation rates and costs, NES-D will provide high-quality business demographics estimates at a higher frequency (annual vs. every 5 years) than the SBO.
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  • Working Paper

    Founding Teams and Startup Performance

    November 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-32

    We explore the role of founding teams in accounting for the post-entry dynamics of startups. While the entrepreneurship literature has largely focused on business founders, we broaden this view by considering founding teams, which include both the founders and the initial employees in the first year of operations. We investigate the idea that the success of a startup may derive from the organizational capital that is created at firm formation and is inalienable from the founding team itself. To test this hypothesis, we exploit premature deaths to identify the causal impact of losing a founding team member on startup performance. We find that the exogenous separation of a founding team member due to premature death has a persistently large, negative, and statistically significant impact on post-entry size, survival, and productivity of startups. While we find that the loss of a key founding team member (e.g. founders) has an especially large adverse effect, the loss of a non-key founding team member still has a significant adverse effect, lending support to our inclusive definition of founding teams. Furthermore, we find that the effects are particularly strong for small founding teams but are not driven by activity in small business-intensive or High Tech industries.
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  • Working Paper

    Who Gains from Creative Destruction? Evidence from High-Quality Entrepreneurship in the United States

    October 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-29

    The question of who gains from high-quality entrepreneurship is crucial to understanding whether investments in incubating potentially innovative start-up firms will produce socially beneficial outcomes. We attempt to bring new evidence to this question by combining new aggregate measures of local area income inequality and income mobility with measures of entrepreneurship from Guzman and Stern (2017). Our new aggregate measures are generated by linking American Community Survey data with the universe of IRS 1040 tax returns. In both fixed effects and IV models using a Bartik-style instrument, we find that entrepreneurship increases income inequality. Further, we find that this increase in income inequality arises due to the fact that almost all of the individual gains associated with increased entrepreneurship accrue to the top 10 percent of the income distribution. While we find mixed evidence for small positive effects of entrepreneurship lower on the income distribution, we find little if any evidence that entrepreneurship increases income mobility.
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  • Working Paper

    Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics (NES-D): Using Administrative and Census Records Data in Business Statistics

    January 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-01

    The quinquennial Survey of Business Owners or SBO provided the only comprehensive source of information in the United States on employer and nonemployer businesses by the sex, race, ethnicity and veteran status of the business owners. The annual Nonemployer Statistics series (NES) provides establishment counts and receipts for nonemployers but contains no demographic information on the business owners. With the transition of the employer component of the SBO to the Annual Business Survey, the Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics series or NES-D represents the continuation of demographics estimates for nonemployer businesses. NES-D will leverage existing administrative and census records to assign demographic characteristics to the universe of approximately 24 million nonemployer businesses (as of 2015). Demographic characteristics include key demographics measured by the SBO (sex, race, Hispanic origin and veteran status) as well as other demographics (age, place of birth and citizenship status) collected but not imputed by the SBO if missing. A spectrum of administrative and census data sources will provide the nonemployer universe and demographics information. Specifically, the nonemployer universe originates in the Business Register; the Census Numident will provide sex, age, place of birth and citizenship status; race and Hispanic origin information will be obtained from multiple years of the decennial census and the American Community Survey; and the Department of Veteran Affairs will provide administrative records data on veteran status. The use of blended data in this manner will make possible the production of NES-D, an annual series that will become the only source of detailed and comprehensive statistics on the scope, nature and activities of U.S. businesses with no paid employment by the demographic characteristics of the business owner. Using the 2015 vintage of nonemployers, initial results indicate that demographic information is available for the overwhelming majority of the universe of nonemployers. For instance, information on sex, age, place of birth and citizenship status is available for over 95 percent of the 24 million nonemployers while race and Hispanic origin are available for about 90 percent of them. These results exclude owners of C-corporations, which represent only 2 percent of nonemployer firms. Among other things, future work will entail imputation of missing demographics information (including that of C-corporations), testing the longitudinal consistency of the estimates, and expanding the set of characteristics beyond the demographics mentioned above. Without added respondent burden and at lower imputation rates and costs, NES-D will meet the needs of stakeholders as well as the economy as a whole by providing reliable estimates at a higher frequency (annual vs. every 5 years) and with a more timely dissemination schedule than the SBO.
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  • Working Paper

    Early-Stage Business Formation: An Analysis of Applications for Employer Identification Numbers

    December 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-52

    This paper reports on the development and analysis of a newly constructed dataset on the early stages of business formation. The data are based on applications for Employer Identification Numbers (EINs) submitted in the United States, known as IRS Form SS-4 filings. The goal of the research is to develop high-frequency indicators of business formation at the national, state, and local levels. The analysis indicates that EIN applications provide forward-looking and very timely information on business formation. The signal of business formation provided by counts of applications is improved by using the characteristics of the applications to model the likelihood that applicants become employer businesses. The results also suggest that EIN applications are related to economic activity at the local level. For example, application activity is higher in counties that experienced higher employment growth since the end of the Great Recession, and application counts grew more rapidly in counties engaged in shale oil and gas extraction. Finally, the paper provides a description of new public-use dataset, the 'Business Formation Statistics (BFS),' that contains new data series on business applications and formation. The initial release of the BFS shows that the number of business applications in the 3rd quarter of 2017 that have relatively high likelihood of becoming job creators is still far below pre-Great Recession levels.
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