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What Do Small Businesses Do

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TLDR
This article found that most small businesses have little desire to grow big or to innovate in any observable way and that such behavior is consistent with the industry characteristics of the majority of small businesses, which are concentrated among skilled craftsmen, lawyers, real estate agents, doctors, small shopkeepers and restaurateurs.
Abstract
In this paper, we show that most small business owners are very different from the entrepreneurs that economic models and policy makers often have in mind. Using new data that samples early stage entrepreneurs just prior to business start up, we show that few small businesses intend to bring a new idea to market. Instead, most intend to provide an existing service to an existing market. Further, we find that most small businesses have little desire to grow big or to innovate in any observable way. We show that such behavior is consistent with the industry characteristics of the majority of small businesses, which are concentrated among skilled craftsmen, lawyers, real estate agents, doctors, small shopkeepers, and restaurateurs. Lastly, we show non pecuniary benefits (being one's own boss, having flexibility of hours, etc.) play a first-order role in the business formation decision. We then discuss how our findings suggest that the importance of entrepreneurial talent, entrepreneurial luck, and financial frictions in explaining the firm size distribution may be overstated. We conclude by discussing the potential policy implications of our findings.

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Citations
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Entrepreneurship and Urban Growth: An Empirical Assessment with Historical Mines

TL;DR: This paper found that proximity to historical mining deposits is associated with reduced entrepreneurship for cities in the 1970s and onward in industries unrelated to mining and found a persistent link between entrepreneurship and city employment growth.
References
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Book

Innovation and Small Firms

TL;DR: Innovation and Small Firms as discussed by the authors provides a rich empirical analysis of the increased importance of small firms in generating technological innovations and their growing contribution to the U.S. economy.
Book

Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that entrepreneurial opportunities are not exogenously given but rather endogenously and systematically created by investments in new knowledge and ideas, to the importance of geographic proximity between entrepreneurial activity and knowledge sources, the impact of location on entrepreneurial performance, and the new roles for board, managers and modes of finance in entrepreneurial firms accessing and absorbing knowledge spillovers.
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Trending Questions (1)
What are the ups down of small business owners?

The paper does not provide information about the ups and downs of small business owners.