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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The Decline Of Self-Employment and Small Business

Self-employment and small business are two sides of a single economic coin: financial independence. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) counts two types of self-employed, the unincorporated and the incorporated. The unincorporated may have employees, but typically do not, i.e. they are sole proprietors. The incorporated have employees, starting with the owner, as the BLS counts the incorporated self-employed as employees of their own corporation.

I know that's confusing, but it's important to separate the sole proprietors from those "self-employed" incorporated businesses that have employees: law firms, doctors' offices, accountants, etc.

When we speak of "small business," we're referring in large part to the incorporated self-employed: people who establish corporations as the legal structure for their enterprise.

Nothing is simple when it comes to parsing all the data, of course, but the BLS has a paper that explains the basic categories: Self-employment in the United States (Bureau of Labor Statistics).

The BLS attributes the decline in unincorporated self-employment from 1950 to 1970 to the consolidation of agriculture. As agriculture became more mechanized, small farms were no longer viable and farming required less labor. As a result, many self-employed farmers and laborers became employees or moved to other sectors.

The trajectory of self-employment from 1970 to the mid-2000s tracked general economic growth, which was weak in the 1970s but began a 30-year boom in the early 1980s.Things changed in the recession, as the self-employed ranks have lost 1.6 million from the peak in 2007. The number of self-employed has fallen to early 1980s levels: (All FRED charts courtesy of frequent contributor B.C.)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Obama is slowly destroying self employed corporations its part of his plan.

Anonymous said...

You can thank the EPA and all the other regulatory agencies who are in bed with big business and looking to rid competition and monopolize. When anti trust laws came about big business dreamed up these regulatory agencies as a way to eliminate competitors.

Anonymous said...

Bet they wish they had a little more regulations in Texas.

Anonymous said...

Everybody I know that can't find a job is contracting for cash and not worrying over regulations, taxes, or anything but feeding their families. They do not "sign up" in any government category.