The US Startup Is Disappearing (qz.com)
Dan Kopf, writing for Quartz: Historically, startups have been the engine of US economy. By creating new jobs and surfacing new ideas, startups play an outsized role in making the economy grow. It's too bad they are a dying breed. While companies that were less than two years old made up about 13% of all companies in 1985, they only accounted for 8% in 2014. From around 1998 to 2010, the share of private sector workers in companies that were less than two years old plummeted from more than 9% to less than 5%. A new report from the Brookings Institution, finds that in nearly every industry, from agriculture to finance, the share of new companies is falling.
seem less like an attempt to build a real business and more like an attempt to build something with enough patents and/or engineers for a buyout. I can't say I blame them. Thanks to our weakly enforced anti-trust law if you don't get bought out the big guys can just bury you.
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That's generally established and I think everyone knows that. The question being put forward is why the rate of people who are taking these risks is decreasing. Have people suddenly become much more risk averse? Is there some kind of economic interference that's resulting in this reduction? Is it just a small dip that happens from time to time for no real discernible reason? Are the number of startups still about the same, but what we're really seeing is a much more rapid failure in startups?
That few people start their own business is not surprising. What's interesting is that fewer people than usual are doing it.
Would that be the Republicans, not one of which voted for it or had any say in the contents of the bill?
You can't have it both ways. If the ACA sucks it's because the Democrats passed it. If it's great its because Democrats passed it.
Anyone with a brain knew that if you make a business take on a large cost for employees who work more than 30 hrs a week all of a sudden there's going to be a lot more employees working 29 hours a week. So now instead of working 32-40 hours a week and not having benefits you get to work 29 hours a week and don't have benefits. So less money and still no benefits.