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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Characteristics of Business Owners'

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Center for Economic Studies - 34

Internal Revenue Service - 30

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 17

Small Business Administration - 17

Longitudinal Business Database - 15

Current Population Survey - 12

North American Industry Classification System - 12

National Science Foundation - 12

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 12

Survey of Business Owners - 11

Standard Industrial Classification - 11

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 10

Kauffman Foundation - 9

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 8

Employer Identification Numbers - 8

Economic Census - 8

Federal Reserve Bank - 8

Social Security Administration - 8

Business Dynamics Statistics - 7

Ordinary Least Squares - 7

Federal Reserve System - 7

Kauffman Firm Survey - 7

National Bureau of Economic Research - 7

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

Business Register - 6

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 6

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 6

Russell Sage Foundation - 6

Decennial Census - 6

Research Data Center - 6

County Business Patterns - 6

Social Security - 6

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 6

PSID - 6

American Economic Association - 5

Census Bureau Business Register - 5

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 5

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Standard Statistical Establishment List - 5

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University of Maryland - 5

American Statistical Association - 5

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American Community Survey - 4

UC Berkeley - 4

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Retail Trade - 4

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Yale University - 4

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

Postal Service - 3

Technical Services - 3

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

Annual Business Survey - 3

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 3

General Accounting Office - 3

New York University - 3

Council of Economic Advisers - 3

Census of Manufactures - 3

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 3

Survey of Consumer Finances - 3

National Center for Health Statistics - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

New York Times - 3

Review of Economics and Statistics - 3

Wholesale Trade - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Boston College - 3

Longitudinal Research Database - 3

Harvard University - 3

WECD - 3

Company Organization Survey - 3

Census of Retail Trade - 3

Service Annual Survey - 3

Department of Commerce - 3

entrepreneur - 28

entrepreneurship - 26

proprietorship - 23

enterprise - 23

entrepreneurial - 21

venture - 17

corporation - 16

minority - 16

employed - 15

financial - 14

sale - 11

company - 10

finance - 10

ownership - 10

loan - 9

earnings - 9

black - 9

proprietor - 9

hispanic - 9

employee - 8

lending - 8

econometric - 8

establishment - 8

owned businesses - 8

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sector - 7

recession - 7

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immigrant - 7

ethnic - 7

disadvantaged - 7

characteristics businesses - 7

survey - 6

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financing - 6

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employ - 6

business owners - 6

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statistical - 5

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bank - 5

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investment - 5

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immigrant entrepreneurs - 5

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market - 5

profitability - 5

asian - 5

franchising - 5

report - 4

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labor - 4

investor - 4

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funding - 4

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credit - 4

quarterly - 4

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irs - 4

economic census - 4

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founder - 4

macroeconomic - 4

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data - 4

small businesses - 4

econometrically - 4

profit - 4

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discrimination - 4

business survival - 4

census survey - 3

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younger firms - 3

employment data - 3

tax - 3

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economically - 3

businesses census - 3

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business startups - 3

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small firms - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 54


  • Working Paper

    Counting The Self-Employed From Two Perspectives: Household Vs. Business Sample Data

    August 1995

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-11

    This study compares the number and attributes of self-employed workers using the Characteristics of Business Owners and Current Population Survey data series. Both sources of data have been widely used in empirical studies of entrepreneurship/self-employment. Substantial and inexplicable differences were found in the two data series' estimates of the number of self-employed men and women for both reference years. In terms of individual attributes, the CBO and CPS appear to report reasonably similar profiles of self-employed individuals in terms of marital status and geographic location, and similar systematic gender differences in the industrial distributions of these individuals. However, in terms of other attributes captured by both data series, including age, the two series exhibit notable dissimilarities.
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  • Working Paper

    Small Businesses Do Appear To Benefit From State/Local Government Economic Development Assistance

    February 1995

    Authors: Timothy Bates

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-02

    This study analyzes traits of small businesses that received state/local government aid in such forms as managerial, technical assistance, help in obtaining loans or bonding, and procurement assistance. Over 13 percent of small firms nationwide were found to be involved in selling goods/services to state/local government. Among firms owned by nonminorities, aid recipients tend to be the larger small businesses, but this pattern did not typify minority-owned firms. Among the nonminority businesses, furthermore, those aided by state/local government are more likely than nonassisted firms to remain in operation, even when various form and owner characteristics are controlled for statistically; this pattern did not typify minority-owned firms. State/local government aid flows disproportionately to women- owned businesses and to firm owners who lack managerial experience. No evidence was found indicating targeting of assistance to specific industry groups.
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  • Working Paper

    Preferential Procurement Programs Do Not Necessarily Help Minority-Owned Business

    January 1995

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-01

    Some minority business enterprises (MBEs) benefit from their participation in government preferential procurement programs and some do not. A subset of minority vendors identified in this study behaves in ways suggesting sensitivity to penalties for violating minority business certification and procurement program regulations. These firms flourish in the absence of fraud penalties. A different group of minority vendors selling to government benefits from an environment in which MBE certification is comprehensive, bonding and working capital assistance are available, and assistance is delivered by a staff dedicated to aiding potential and actual MBE vendors. The preferential procurement program can serve as either a valuable economic development tool for fostering minority business development, or it can promote MBE front companies that pass on their procurement contracts to nonminority firms. Some governments choose to operate the former type of program; others opt for the latter.
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  • Working Paper

    Firms Started As Franchises Have Lower Survival Rates Than Independent Small Business Startups

    May 1994

    Authors: Timothy Bates

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-94-03

    Aspiring entrepreneurs choosing to become franchisees certainly expect to improve their chances of survival during the turbulent early years of business startup and operation. Alignment with a franchiser parent company offers the franchisee managerial assistance, access to financial capital, and access to markets via the right to utilize the parent company trademark. This study examines survival patterns among franchise and nonfranchise small firms started between 1984 and 1987: survival through late 1991 is tracked for all firms. Although the franchise operations are larger scale, better capitalized young firms, the independent business startups are found to be more profitable and their survival prospects are better than those of franchises.
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  • Working Paper

    On The Turnover of Business Firms and Business Managers

    April 1994

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-92-06

    The success of a business depends in part on whether or not the manager and the business make a good "fit" or "match." Success also depends upon characteristics of the business that are distinct from the manager, for example, the convenience of the business location to customers. Variations across firms in "match quality" and in "business quality" account, in part, for why some businesses survive and others are discontinued. This paper is a first attempt at assessing the relative importance of variation in match quality and variation in business quality in accounting for the turnover dynamics of the U.S. small business sector. An evolutionary model is developed in which a selection process tends to eliminate both "unfit" business as well as "unfit" pairings between businesses and managers. We estimated this model with the Characteristics of Business Owners Survey. Our estimates suggest that variations in match quality play a more significant role than variations in business, or general, quality in accounting for turnover behavior of U.S. of small businesses. We discuss the implications of this finding and demonstrate its importance in the context of an experiment conducted in the estimated model economy.
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  • Working Paper

    Determinants Of Survival And Profiability Among Asian Immigrant-Owned Small Businesses

    August 1993

    Authors: Timothy Bates

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-93-11

    The immigrant entrepreneur is often seen as a member of supportive peer and community subgroups. These networks assist in the creation and successful operation of firms by providing social resources in the form of customers, loyal employees and financing. This study provides evidence that the success and survival patterns of Asian immigrant firms derive from their large investments of financial capital and the impressive educational credentials of the business owners. Heavy utilization of social support networks typifies the less profitable, more failure-prone small businesses owned by Asian immigrants.
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  • Working Paper

    Gender Segregation Small Firms

    October 1992

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-92-13

    This paper studies interfirm gender segregation in a unique sample of small employers. We focus on small firms because previous research on interfirm segregation has studied only large firms and because it is easier to link the demographic characteristics of employers and employees in small firms. This latter feature permits an assessment of the role of employer discrimination in creating gender segregation. Our first finding is that interfirm segregation is prevalent among small employers. Indeed men and women rarely work in fully integrated firms. Our second finding is that the education and gender of the business owner strongly influence the gender composition of a firm's workforce. This suggests that employer discrimination may be an important cause of workplace gender segregation. Finally, we estimate that interfirm segregation can account for up to 50% of the gender gap in annual earnings.
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  • Working Paper

    Managerial Tenure, Business Age And Small Business Dynamics

    September 1992

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-92-11

    This paper studies a Census Bureau survey of the small business sector that contains information on business age, business size and other proxies for business quality, information, typically available on business data sets, as well as proxies for the quality of the manager of each business, information that is not common to such data sets. One of the key proxies for managerial quality is the length of time the manager has been running the business, that is, managerial tenure. With proxies for both the underlying quality of each business and for the quality of the manager running the business, we are able to begin separating the influences of the manager from that of the underlying business on such factors as business discontinuance and business transfer. An example of the questions we explore is: Holding business quality fixed, what is the impact of the manager on the probability of business discontinuance? Regarding this question, we find that managers have a large impact on the course of their businesses, in particular, among businesses of the same age, managerial tenure has a significant impact on the probability of business discontinuance and transfer.
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  • Working Paper

    Commercial Bank Lending Practices And The Development Of Black-Owned Construction Companies

    December 1991

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-91-09

    Although the construction industry has been a tremendous growth industry for black entrepreneurs in recent years, black-owned construction firms, on average, are less than half the size of those owned by nonminorities. Previous findings suggest that limited access to financial capital, particularly bank loans, has restricted the size of black-owned businesses. Examination of nationwide random samples of construction companies reveals that black firms are treated differently than nonminorities when they borrow from commercial banks: they get smaller loans than nonminorities who have otherwise identical traits. Undercapitalization, in turn, is shown to increase the likelihood of firm discontinuance. Alleviation of undercapitalization problems would help promote the development of black-owned businesses in the construction industry.
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  • Working Paper

    Self-Employment Trends Among Mexican Americans

    August 1990

    Authors: Timothy Bates

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-90-09

    Minority businesses are commonly aggregated into groups of 1) black, 2) Hispanic, and 3) Asian-owned firms. These analytical groupings may, in fact, be useful if blacks, Hispanics and Asians exhibit intra-group similarities and intergroup differences in terms of business development patterns. The applicable similarities and differences do appear to typify the Asian and black groups of self-employed, but they do not typify Hispanic-owned small businesses. In other words, "Hispanic" does not appear to be a useful category for analysis. The Hispanic subset, Mexican American-owned firms, is judged to be suitable for analysis. Most minority-owned firms have traditionally been started with minimal financial capital inputs by owners who have not attended college. The resultant small scale firms have frequently oriented their operations toward serving a low income minority clientele. In this study, I investigate two closely interrelated broad hypotheses on minority business dynamics, utilizing a sample of Mexican American business establishments drawn from the Characteristics of Business Owners data base: Traditional firms - these firms tend to a) be small scale, b) have high failure rates, c) and generate few jobs because of their minimal owner inputs of financial and human capital. Emerging firms, in contrast, are most commonly started by better educated owners--many of whom have attended four or more years of college--and financial capital inputs are high relative to those observed in traditional lines of business. It is because of these larger financial and human capital inputs that emerging firms tend to be a) larger scale, b) have lower failure rates, and c) generate more jobs, relative to their traditional cohorts. Sociologists have used the term "protected market" to describe the culturally-based tastes of ethnic minorities that can only be served by co-ethnic businesses. Particularly in the early years of settlement, immigrants are assumed to patronize co-ethnic enterprises, and this pattern of patronage seems to typify Hispanic enclaves in areas such as Southern California. Whether or not the resultant protected market is an asset to Mexican American firms-- particularly those in traditional fields such as small-scale retailing--is investigated econometrically. The evidence indicates that the protected market provided by immigrants patronizing co-ethnic enterprises is an absolute hindrance to Mexican American business viability. The very low incomes of most recent immigrants constrain the attractiveness of this protected market. The state of the barrio business community reflects the economic circumstances of its clientele.
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