Posts Tagged ‘ microbusiness ’

Study: Corporations Grow, Proprietorships Don’t

Apr 24th, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Research

Most U.S. business owners make a decision about the legal form of their business at startup and rarely change it within the first few years of operation. That is the principle finding of a new research report, entitled “How Do Firms Choose Legal Form of Organization?”, written by Rebal Cole with funding from the SBA [...]



Living for myself

Apr 4th, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Policy Matters

If we are going to advocate for anything for women, I would think we’d advocate for our own freedom. Freedom from societal sex role scripts, yes, but also freedom from being required to fulfill anybody’s expectations — even those of our female peers.

Freedom means having options. If you don’t like my options, you don’t have to live them. But don’t tell me that I shouldn’t live them, either.

That’s when you’re trying to take my freedom away from me, in the name of fighting for my freedom.



Study: Small Biz Tax Gap Inaccurate, Unfair

Apr 4th, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Politics & Policy

We’ve been hearing about the tax gap for a long time, long before the Internal Revenue Service released its 2001 tax gap estimates back in 2006. The release of those estimates seemed to simply add numbers to what everybody “knew”: small business owners who are not subject to either involuntary withholding or third party reporting [...]



AmEx OPEN Studies Women-Owned Firms

Apr 4th, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Research

As of this year, an estimated 8.1 million (29%) U.S. firms were women-owned (51% or more), generating almost $1.3 trillion in revenues and employing roughly 7.7 million people. That’s the main finding of an analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data on women-owned businesses performed by our old friend Julie Weeks of Womenable.com for American Express [...]



Credit Card Protections Extended to Small Businesses

Apr 3rd, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Politics & Policy

Sometimes, Congress winds up doing the right thing for the wrong reasons and that is never as true as it is when lawmakers don’t know what is going on out here in the real world. Last month, Congresswoman Nita Lowey (D-NY) introduced the Small Business Credit Card Act (H.R. 1137). This relatively short bill would [...]



Health Care Hearing Forgets Small Business

Mar 21st, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Regulations

Last week, the Senate Committee on Finance held a hearing to mark the first anniversary of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, featuring Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. There was quite a lot about the hearing that was completely predictable. Committee Democrats spent their time encouraging Secretary Sebelius to elaborate on the [...]



Small Business Absent From Econ Advisory Groups

Mar 21st, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Economy, Politics & Policy

If you look carefully at President Obama’s most strenuous efforts at small business outreach, you might start to see a pattern emerge. Take a look at “Startup America,” the administration’s effort to encourage and support what it calls “high impact” small businesses. The SBA has already lined up a mentor matching program for those entrepreneurs [...]



House Panel Reviews SBA Budget Request

Mar 21st, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Politics & Policy

If you’ve been wondering what the House Small Business Committee has been up to lately, one of their main orders of business has been President’s proposed fiscal 2012 budget for the Small Business Administration. The Committee held its budget hearing last week and, according to opening statements prepared by both Committee Chairman Sam Graves (R-MO) [...]



A Moment of Nostalgia

Mar 21st, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Policy Matters

When lawmakers bleat about how much they love small businesses, it can sometimes be nauseating but it is still a little reassuring. It is a nod in our direction, even if they don’t mean a word of it.

On the other hand, I’ll admit that it’s difficult to listen to those same lawmakers behave like starstuck fangirls every time somebody like Bill Gates or Jeff Immelt visits Capital Hill. Clearly, they really believe that U.S. economic policy should revolve around big businesses.

I hesitate to say this because I know what kind of firestorm usually erupts whenever anybody evokes the “C” word.

Honesty compels me to admit, however, that we haven’t had economic policy revolving around small businesses since the days when there was a White House Conference on Small Business and when the SBA Administrator was elevated to a Cabinet level position.



The Economy: Consumers Feel Better But Why?

Feb 21st, 2011 | By Dawn R. Rivers | Category: Economy

According to the latest release on the subject from the Commerce Department, fourth quarter 2010 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth clocked in at 3.2%, following a third quarter that saw an increase of 2.6% in the GDP. All in all, that is a pretty respectable level of economic growth. The jobs picture is the classic [...]