Fr. 66.00

The Promise and Peril of Entrepreneurship - Job Creation and Survival among US Startups

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor Robert Fairlie is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research. Zachary Kroff is an economist with the Center for Economic Studies at the US Census Bureau. Javier Miranda is Deputy Head of the Department of Structural Change and Productivity at the Halle Institute for Economic Research in Germany. He is also Associate Professor in Microeconomics, Productivity Research, at Friedrich Schiller University Jena. Nikolas Zolas is Senior Economist with the Center for Economic Studies at the US Census Bureau. Klappentext "A book describing surprising findings from a new dataset on startups in the US"-- Zusammenfassung A clearer view of entrepreneurship, based on new comprehensive data, that upends what we know about job creation and survival among US startups. Startups create jobs and power economic growth. That’s an article of faith in the United States—but, as The Promise and Peril of Entrepreneurship reveals, our faith may be built on shaky ground. Economists Robert Fairlie, Zachary Kroff, Javier Miranda, and Nikolas Zolas—working with Census Bureau microdata—have developed a new data set, the Comprehensive Startup Panel, that tracks job creation and the survival of every startup in the country. In doing so, they recalibrate our understanding of how startups behave in the US economy. Specifically, their work seeks to answer three critical questions: How many jobs does each entrepreneur create? Do those jobs disappear quickly? And how long do entrepreneurial enterprises survive? Job creation and survival rates are, the authors conclude, much lower than those reported by official federal sources. Such discrepancies emerge from the more comprehensive picture drawn from this new data set—a picture that, for instance, highlights the important but understudied differences between employer firms (startups that hire people) and nonemployer firms (startups that do not initially hire people but may do so in later years as they grow). This reframing captures the vast number of businesses that start with no employees, a number largely missing from the statistics underpinning the mythos of the riskiness of entrepreneurship. The book also explores who owns startups—focusing on differences by race and ethnicity. With its new, wider view of the realities of job creation and survival among startups, The Promise and Peril of Entrepreneurship has significant implications for economic policymaking and research, and for the billions of dollars that the government and the private sector invest in promoting entrepreneurship. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface vii 1 Introduction: Entrepreneurship 1 2 Businesses and Startups in the United States 15 3 Job Creation by Startups 39 4 Startup Survival 61 5 The Dynamics of Job Creation and Survival among Startups 77 6 Refining Our Definition of an Entrepreneur 99 7 Who Owns Startups? 133 8 Policy Implications and Future Research 167 Notes 191 References 203 Index 215...

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