CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'entrepreneurial'

The following papers contain search terms that you selected. From the papers listed below, you can navigate to the PDF, the profile page for that working paper, or see all the working papers written by an author. You can also explore tags, keywords, and authors that occur frequently within these papers.
Click here to search again

Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Longitudinal Business Database - 50

Center for Economic Studies - 26

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 24

Internal Revenue Service - 23

North American Industry Classification System - 23

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 21

National Science Foundation - 21

Characteristics of Business Owners - 21

Employer Identification Numbers - 19

Business Dynamics Statistics - 19

Kauffman Foundation - 17

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 15

Survey of Business Owners - 14

Ordinary Least Squares - 14

Standard Industrial Classification - 14

Small Business Administration - 13

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 13

National Bureau of Economic Research - 13

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 13

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 12

Federal Reserve Bank - 12

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 12

Census Bureau Business Register - 11

Business Register - 10

County Business Patterns - 10

Current Population Survey - 9

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 9

Initial Public Offering - 9

Kauffman Firm Survey - 9

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 9

Special Sworn Status - 9

Disclosure Review Board - 8

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 8

University of Maryland - 8

International Trade Research Report - 8

Federal Reserve System - 8

Social Security Administration - 7

Decennial Census - 7

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 6

Nonemployer Statistics - 6

Annual Business Survey - 6

Department of Homeland Security - 6

Social Security - 6

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 6

Longitudinal Research Database - 6

Research Data Center - 6

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 6

National Employer Survey - 5

W-2 - 5

Total Factor Productivity - 5

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

Patent and Trademark Office - 5

American Community Survey - 5

George Mason University - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

Retail Trade - 5

Census of Manufactures - 5

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 5

PSID - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Business Employment Dynamics - 5

Board of Governors - 5

Social Security Number - 4

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 4

Legal Form of Organization - 4

Economic Census - 4

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 4

Arts, Entertainment - 4

Accommodation and Food Services - 4

Health Care and Social Assistance - 4

Wholesale Trade - 4

Technical Services - 4

Linear Probability Models - 4

World Bank - 4

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 4

Survey of Consumer Finances - 4

VAR - 4

Columbia University - 4

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

University of Toronto - 4

MIT Press - 4

Russell Sage Foundation - 4

Protected Identification Key - 3

IBM - 3

Limited Liability Company - 3

Business Formation Statistics - 3

Core Based Statistical Area - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Boston College - 3

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 3

Cobb-Douglas - 3

Service Annual Survey - 3

COMPUSTAT - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

Ohio State University - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

entrepreneur - 72

entrepreneurship - 68

venture - 43

enterprise - 28

proprietorship - 25

employed - 23

company - 23

growth - 23

investment - 20

employ - 19

proprietor - 17

corporation - 17

startup - 17

acquisition - 15

founder - 15

recession - 15

employee - 14

opportunity - 13

financial - 13

ownership - 12

earner - 11

employment growth - 11

wealth - 11

innovation - 10

organizational - 10

finance - 10

minority - 10

sector - 10

business startups - 9

hispanic - 9

immigrant - 9

startup firms - 9

econometric - 9

earnings - 9

investor - 8

employment entrepreneurship - 8

manufacturing - 8

sale - 8

industrial - 8

black - 8

funding - 8

market - 8

patent - 7

labor - 7

ethnicity - 7

loan - 7

quarterly - 7

workforce - 7

firms grow - 7

characteristics businesses - 7

businesses grow - 6

economically - 6

revenue - 6

startups employees - 6

prospect - 6

innovator - 6

innovate - 6

immigrant entrepreneurs - 6

corporate - 6

competitor - 6

borrower - 6

lending - 6

merger - 6

gdp - 6

establishment - 6

owned businesses - 6

owner - 6

incorporated - 5

endogeneity - 5

ethnic - 5

black business - 5

financing - 5

white - 5

lender - 5

estimating - 5

tenure - 5

firm growth - 5

growth firms - 5

growth productivity - 5

profitable - 5

disadvantaged - 5

business owners - 5

economist - 4

small businesses - 4

wholesale - 4

patenting - 4

inventory - 4

native - 4

immigration - 4

innovative - 4

metropolitan - 4

diversification - 4

strategic - 4

bank - 4

macroeconomic - 4

trend - 4

borrowing - 4

recessionary - 4

productivity growth - 4

younger firms - 4

decline - 4

bankruptcy - 4

competitiveness - 4

geographically - 4

profitability - 4

nonemployer businesses - 3

technological - 3

hiring - 3

employees startups - 3

migrant - 3

socioeconomic - 3

unemployed - 3

invention - 3

rent - 3

capital - 3

leverage - 3

profit - 3

banking - 3

acquirer - 3

debt - 3

shareholder - 3

occupation - 3

partnership - 3

hire - 3

production - 3

producing - 3

firms productivity - 3

growth employment - 3

firms young - 3

survey - 3

turnover - 3

businesses census - 3

racial - 3

city - 3

regional - 3

asian - 3

invest - 3

economic growth - 3

investing - 3

small firms - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 79


  • Working Paper

    The Promise and Potential of Linked Employer-Employee Data for Entrepreneurship Research

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-29

    In this paper, we highlight the potential for linked employer-employee data to be used in entrepreneurship research, describing new data on business start-ups, their founders and early employees, and providing examples of how they can be used in entrepreneurship research. Linked employer-employee data provides a unique perspective on new business creation by combining information on the business, workforce, and individual. By combining data on both workers and firms, linked data can investigate many questions that owner-level or firm-level data cannot easily answer alone - such as composition of the workforce at start-ups and their role in explaining business dynamics, the flow of workers across new and established firms, and the employment paths of the business owners themselves.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Job Creation, Small vs. Large vs. Young, and the SBA

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-24

    Analyzing a list of all Small Business Administration (SBA) loans in 1991 to 2009 linked with annual information on all U.S. employers from 1976 to 2012, we apply detailed matching and regression methods to estimate the variation in SBA loan effects on job creation and firm survival across firm age and size groups. The estimated number of jobs created per million dollars of loans within the small business sector generally increases with size and decreases in age. The results suggest that the growth of small, mature firms is least financially constrained, and that faster growing firms experience the greatest financial constraints to growth. The estimated association between survival and loan amount is larger for younger and smaller firms facing the 'valley of death.'
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Spinout Formation: Do Opportunities and Constraints Benefit High Capital Founders?

    June 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-07

    We examine the role of human capital in employees' decisions to leave their parent firms andform spinouts. Using a large sample of individuals who formed spinouts in manufacturing industries between 1992 and 2005, and their co-workers who did not, we find that after controlling for age, education level, gender and alien status, individuals with higher human capital (measured as their earnings or experience) are more likely to form spinouts. We then examine the impact of industry opportunities and constraints on the propensity of high human capital individuals to form spinouts. Counterintuitively, we find that both industry constraints (measured as industry capital intensity) and opportunities (industry R&D intensity) reduce the propensity of higher human capital individuals to form spinouts. We interpret these results as being consistent with the argument that high human capital founders are more likely to choose larger, more capital-intensive projects than low human capital individuals, and thus face greater constraints. On the other side, R&D intensive industries appear to present abundant entrepreneurial opportunities, allowing low human capital individuals to identify their own opportunities thus decreasing the relative advantage of high human capital individuals.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Who Works for Whom? Worker Sorting in a Model of Entrepreneurship with Heterogeneous Labor Markets

    January 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-08R

    Young and small firms are typically matched with younger and nonemployed individuals, and they provide these workers with lower earnings compared to other firms. To explore the mechanisms behind these facts, a dynamic model of entrepreneurship is introduced, where individuals can choose not to work, become entrepreneurs, or work in one of the two sectors: corporate or entrepreneurial. The differences in production technology, financial constraints, and labor market frictions lead to sector-specific wages and worker sorting across the two sectors. Individuals with lower assets tend to accept lower-paying jobs in the entrepreneurial sector, an implication that finds support in the data. The effect on the entrepreneurial sector of changes in key parameters is also studied to explore some channels that may have contributed to the decline of entrepreneurship in the United States.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Human Capital of Spinouts

    January 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-06

    This study examines how the human capital of spinout founders and the performance of parent firms affect the success of spinouts by using a matched employer-employee dataset of new ventures covering 7 SIC 1-digit sectors in the United States. Our data cover 29,100 spinouts and 379,800 new ventures formed by lone entrepreneurs in 23 states between 1992 and 2005. We evaluate several components of human capital: outcomes of human capital investments vs. human capital investments, task-related human capital vs. non-task-related human capital, and individual human capital vs. group capital, and examine whether these types of human capital affect spinout performance differently. We find that spinout founder's earnings (an outcome of human capital investment) and industry experience (task-related human capital) prior to spinout formation have strong positive correlations with spinout performance, as measured by size, wage and growth rate. We also find that group experience of spinout founders prior to spinout formation has a positive correlation with spinout performance, though this effect is slightly weaker and smaller than those of spinout founder's earnings and industry experience. The effects of these three measures of human capital are mostly present after controlling for parent firm establishment fixed effects. We find some evidence that the size of parent firm establishments has a positive correlation with spinout performance, but this effect does not hold after controlling for parent firm fixed effects. Finally, we find that founder's earnings, industry experience, group experience and parent firm size are more important during the early stage of spinout formation.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    WHAT DO I TAKE WITH ME?: THE MEDIATING EFFECT OF SPIN-OUT TEAM SIZE AND TENURE ON THE FOUNDER-FIRM PERFORMANCE RELATIONSHIP

    April 2013

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-13-17

    Our study examines the mediating effect of spin-out team characteristics on the relationship between founder quality and parent and spin-out performance. Since the ability to transfer or recreate complementary assets is a critical determinant of performance, we theorize and show that founders with greater ability impact both parent firm and spin-out performance by assembling teams that represent strong complementary human capital. Using linked employee-employer US Census data from the legal services industry, we find founding team size and tenure mediate the founder quality effect. Our findings have practical implications for both managers of existing firms and aspiring founders as it relates to their human resource strategies: the factor most salient to performance is not the individual quality per se, but the manner in which it impacts the transfer and spillover of complementary human capital.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND URBAN GROWTH:AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT WITH HISTORICAL MINES

    April 2013

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-13-15

    Measures of entrepreneurship, such as average establishment size and the prevalence of start-ups, correlate strongly with employment growth across and within metropolitan areas, but the endogeneity of these measures bedevils interpretation. Chinitz (1961) hypothesized that coal mines near Pittsburgh led that city to specialization in industries, like steel, with significant scale economies and that those big firms led to a dearth of entrepreneurial human capital across several generations. We test this idea by looking at the spatial location of past mines across the United States: proximity to historical mining deposits is associated with bigger firms and fewer start-ups in the middle of the 20th century. We use mines as an instrument for our entrepreneurship measures and find a persistent link between entrepreneurship and city employment growth; this connection works primarily through lower employment growth of start- ups in cities that are closer to mines. These effects hold in cold and warm regions alike and in industries that are not directly related to mining, such as trade, finance and services. We use quantile instrumental variable regression techniques and identify mostly homogeneous effects throughout the conditional city growth distribution.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Growth Through Heterogeneous Innovations

    June 2012

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-12-08

    We study how exploration versus exploitation innovations impact economic growth through a tractable endogenous growth framework that contains multiple innovation sizes, multiproduct firms, and entry/exit. Firms invest in exploration R&D to acquire new product lines and exploitation R&D to improve their existing product lines. We model and show empirically that exploration R&D does not scale as strongly with firm size as exploitation R&D. The resulting framework conforms to many regularities regarding innovation and growth differences across the firm size distribution. We also incorporate patent citations into our theoretical framework. The framework generates a simple test using patent citations that indicates that entrants and small firms have relatively higher growth spillover effects.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    What Do I Take With Me: The Impact of Transfer and Replication of Resources on Parent and Spin-Out Firm Performance

    February 2011

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-06

    Focusing on entrepreneurial ventures created by employees leaving a firm, our study examines the differential impact of knowledge transfer and knowledge spillovers on both parent and spin-out performance. While extant research often uses knowledge transfer and spillover interchangeably, our study distinguishes between the two based on the 'rivalness' of the relevant knowledge. We theorize that both knowledge transfer (proxied by the size of the exiting employee team) and knowledge spillovers (proxied by the experience of the exiting employee team) will aid spin-out performance. However, knowledge transfer, being more rival, will have a greater adverse impact than knowledge spillovers on parent firm performance. Using U.S. Census Bureau linked employee-employer data from the legal services industry, we find support for our hypotheses. Our study thus contributes to extant literature by highlighting a key dimension of knowledge ' rivalness ' and the differential competitive dynamics effect of resources with varying degrees of rivalness.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Clusters and Entrepreneurship

    September 2010

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-31

    This paper examines the role of regional clusters in regional entrepreneurship. We focus on the distinct influences of convergence and agglomeration on growth in the number of start-up firms as well as in employment in these new firms in a given region-industry. While reversion to the mean and diminishing returns to entrepreneurship at the region-industry level can result in a convergence effect, the presence of complementary economic activity creates externalities that enhance incentives and reduce barriers for new business creation. Clusters are a particularly important way through which location-based complementarities are realized. The empirical analysis uses a novel panel dataset from the Longitudinal Business Database of the Census Bureau and the U.S. Cluster Mapping Project (Porter, 2003). Using this dataset, there is significant evidence of the positive impact of clusters on entrepreneurship. After controlling for convergence in start-up activity at the region-industry level, industries located in regions with strong clusters (i.e. a large presence of other related industries) experience higher growth in new business formation and start-up employment. Strong clusters are also associated with the formation of new establishments of existing firms, thus influencing the location decision of multiestablishment firms. Finally, strong clusters contribute to start-up firm survival.
    View Full Paper PDF