This paper shows that employment in cohorts of US firms is strongly influenced by aggregate conditions at the time of their entry. Employment fluctuations of startups are procyclical, they persist into later years, and cohort-level employment variations are largely driven by differences in firm size, rather than the number of firms. An estimated general equilibrium firm dynamics model reveals that aggregate conditions at birth, rather than post-entry choices, drive the majority of cohort-level employment variation by affecting the share of startups with high growth potential. In the aggregate, changes in startup conditions result in large, slow-moving fluctuations in employment
T he United States has long been viewed as having among the world’s most entrepreneurial, dynamic, a...
Explores the factors behind the constant number of new firms started each year, including the relati...
While a growing literature has examined the relationship between economic shocks and job creation in...
This paper shows that employment in cohorts of US firms is strongly influenced by aggregate conditio...
Only half of all startups survive past the age of ve and surviving businesses grow at vastly di eren...
I describe two studies on firm dynamics and job creation. In Chapter 1, I identify a key predictor o...
Job creation and destruction rates fall with a firm's age, young businesses have higher exit rates, ...
Based on Business Dynamics Statistics data, points out the large role start-ups play in new net job ...
Recent research suggests that employment in young firms is more negatively impacted during economic ...
Whether firms founded in economic crises have sufficient growth potential is an important question f...
Summarizes findings from new measures of business dynamics on jobs created by business start-ups in ...
This paper uses quarterly data from the social security registry covering the full population of Bel...
Understanding the role that start-ups play in labor market dynamics can help economists expedite la...
textabstractThis paper examines the relationship between firm births and job creation in Great Brita...
This article carries out a detailed descriptive analysis of employment dynamics of new firms, using ...
T he United States has long been viewed as having among the world’s most entrepreneurial, dynamic, a...
Explores the factors behind the constant number of new firms started each year, including the relati...
While a growing literature has examined the relationship between economic shocks and job creation in...
This paper shows that employment in cohorts of US firms is strongly influenced by aggregate conditio...
Only half of all startups survive past the age of ve and surviving businesses grow at vastly di eren...
I describe two studies on firm dynamics and job creation. In Chapter 1, I identify a key predictor o...
Job creation and destruction rates fall with a firm's age, young businesses have higher exit rates, ...
Based on Business Dynamics Statistics data, points out the large role start-ups play in new net job ...
Recent research suggests that employment in young firms is more negatively impacted during economic ...
Whether firms founded in economic crises have sufficient growth potential is an important question f...
Summarizes findings from new measures of business dynamics on jobs created by business start-ups in ...
This paper uses quarterly data from the social security registry covering the full population of Bel...
Understanding the role that start-ups play in labor market dynamics can help economists expedite la...
textabstractThis paper examines the relationship between firm births and job creation in Great Brita...
This article carries out a detailed descriptive analysis of employment dynamics of new firms, using ...
T he United States has long been viewed as having among the world’s most entrepreneurial, dynamic, a...
Explores the factors behind the constant number of new firms started each year, including the relati...
While a growing literature has examined the relationship between economic shocks and job creation in...