Monday, December 4, 2017
small business shares
Small businesses comprise what share of
the U.S. economy?
Small businesses make up:
99.7 percent of U.S. employer firms,
64 percent of net new private-sector
jobs,
49.2 percent of private-sector
employment,
42.9 percent of private-sector payroll,
46 percent of private-sector output,
43 percent of high-tech employment,
98 percent of firms exporting goods,
and
33 percent of exporting value.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, SUSB, CPS;
International Trade Administration; Bureau
of Labor Statistics, BED; Advocacy-funded
research, Small Business GDP: Update 2002-
2010, www.sba.gov/advocacy/7540/42371.
How many small businesses are there?
In 2010 there were 27.9 million small
businesses, and 18,500 firms with 500
employees or more. Over three-quarters
of small businesses were nonemployers;
this number has trended up over the
past decade, while employers have been
relatively flat (figure 1).
What is a small business?
The Office of Advocacy defines a small
business as an independent business
having fewer than 500 employees. For
the small business definition by industry
used in government programs and
contracting, see www.sba.gov/content/
small-business-size-standards.
What percent of small businesses
operate as . . . ?
The many kinds of small businesses are
shown in table 1. The definitions overlap
so the shares total more than 100.
What is small businesses’ share of net
new jobs?
Small firms accounted for 64 percent of
the net new jobs created between 1993
and 2011 (or 11.8 million of the 18.5
million net new jobs). Since the latest
recession, from mid-2009 to 2011, small
firms, led by the larger ones in the category
(20-499 employees), accounted for
67 percent of the net new jobs.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, BED. For
the latest employment statistics, see Advocacy’s
quarterly reports, www.sba.gov/advocacy/10871.
How can small businesses’ share of
net new jobs be larger than their share
of employment, yet their share of
employment remains steady?
As firms grow, they change employment
size classes. So as small firms grow,
their growth counts toward small firm
job gains; but if they pass the 500-employee
mark, their employment is classified
as large firm employment.
Do the unemployed become self-employed?
When finding work is difficult, starting
a business can be just as difficult
if not more so. But in March 2011, a
significant number of the self-employed,
5.5 percent or about 900,000, had been
unemployed in the previous year.
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