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This article was published 4 year(s) and 5 month(s) ago

COVID-19 gave startups a boost

our-opinion

July 9, 2021 by our-opinion

Editorial from the Dallas Morning News 

If you’re looking for silver linings in this pandemic-damaged economy, here’s a good one: The American entrepreneurial spirit is alive and well. 

In fact, COVID-19 seems to have uncovered it.

According to census data, there were 500,219 new business applications in May 2021 — an increase of more than 68 percent year-over-year. Obviously, the pandemic caused a deep dip early in 2020, but startups have more than recouped those losses, reaching levels not seen in decades.

According to a February report by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, about 380 out of every 100,000 American adults became new entrepreneurs each month last year. That rate rose over the previous year for every demographic category: genders, ethnicities, immigrant statuses and age groups.

The most popular sectors for startups were retail, professional services and construction, Visual Capitalist reported.

What makes this silver lining even brighter is that it comes after a long decline of American entrepreneurship.

“U.S. entrepreneurship has largely been on the decline for more than three decades,” Dallas developer and author Craig Hall lamented in his 2019 book “BOOM: Bridging the Opportunity Gap to Reignite Startups.” 

Many sources, including Hall, have asserted that one of the factors driving the decline in entrepreneurship for decades has been consolidation. With large companies reaching deeper into almost every market, there’s just less room for small businesses. If the pandemic disrupted that trend, that’s a good thing.

But there may be another story beneath the numbers. In 2015, Inc. magazine reported on another methodology for tracking entrepreneurship by an academic consortium called Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. 

That group looked at not only government data, but surveys of individuals and commerce experts. Its method included a category of entrepreneur labeled “nascents”: those in the embryonic stages of business creation. According to Inc., these are people with a side hustle, who would likely report being employed by someone else, but are actively pursuing commercial projects of their own. The GEM report said the rate of nascent entrepreneurship had almost doubled in just five years between 2010 and 2015.

So what may have happened in 2020 was not a rise in enterprising behavior, but a removal of the employment cover under which it was operating. More Americans had to make their side hustle their full-time gig.

Whatever the details, it appears that at least some of those people who lost their jobs last year have launched out on their own. We wish them success. 

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