Kauffman Foundation: National startup activity continues to improve

May 18, 2017  |  Bobby Burch

Photo by NASA.

National startup activity grew slightly in 2016, a consecutive three-year improvement that reached pre-Great Recession levels, according to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.

However, in the long-term view startup activity is still in decline when compared to the 1980s,  the 2017 Kauffman Index of Startup Activity found.

Victor Hwang, vice president of entrepreneurship at the Kauffman Foundation, said that although the results are encouraging, work remains to create more economic dynamism.

“A three-year upward trend in new business formation is a promising sign for the economy,” Hwang said in a release. “Recent research demonstrates that more startups lead to higher productivity, wage growth and quality of life. Growing startups not only support individual entrepreneurs but lift surrounding communities. We need to identify and remove barriers and contribute to a new model of economic development that infuses more entrepreneurship into the economy.”

The index — which presents entrepreneurial trends nationally, at the state level and for the 40 largest metro areas — revealed two remarkable improvements in U.S. entrepreneurship.

First, the index found that more new entrepreneurs are starting businesses to pursue a good opportunity rather than to generate income. The share of new entrepreneurs pursuing a business opportunity rather than starting a firm from necessity reached 86.3 percent — a 12 percentage point improvement since 2009, according to the report.

It also found that U.S. entrepreneurs are becoming more diverse. First-generation immigrants now make up nearly 30 percent of all new U.S. entrepreneurs — the highest level for the second time in 20 years, growing from 13.3 percent in 1996.

“Immigrants are twice as likely as native-born to start new businesses, and this is good news for new business activity and the economy,” Arnobio Morelix, senior research analyst at the Kauffman Foundation, said in a release. “For generations, immigrants have been a key part of America’s innovation DNA – from Alexander Graham Bell inventing the telephone to Sergey Brin starting Google. Today more than 40 percent of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children, and over half of America’s billion-dollar unicorns have an immigrant founder.”

While entrepreneurship among immigrants grew, the overall rate of new entrepreneurs decreased — from 0.33 percent in 2015 to 0.31 percent in 2016, translating to 310 out of every 100,000 adults starting new businesses each month. The index found that the business-creation rate is roughly 540,000 adults switching to self-employed business ownership each month during the year.

The index also analyzes startup activity in the 25 largest and smallest states, as well as the 40 largest metro areas.  

Among the largest states, California, Texas, Florida, Arizona and Colorado had the highest startup activity in 2017, respectively. Missouri ranked No. 10 in the 25 largest states.

Among the smallest 25 states, Nevada, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Montana and Idaho had the highest startup activity in 2017, respectively. Kansas ranked No. 15 in the 25 smallest states.

To read more on the national index, click here. To learn more about the state-by-state comparisons, click here.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        City Market eats: Master roaster hopes hungry Kansas Citians will flock to Murmuration 

        By Tommy Felts | April 8, 2025

        A new eatery and cocktail bar that now shares a space with the popular City Market Coffee Roasters is designed to reflect a vision of bringing people together, fostering connection, and embracing the diversity that makes the City Market so special, said master roaster Nikole Ammer. Plus, the people are hungry — from day to…

        Chamber showcase fills Union Station with real-life social networking for small biz owners

        By Tommy Felts | April 4, 2025

        Entrepreneur Dane Moss likes to do things a little over the top, he shared Wednesday from inside the Grand Hall at Union Station, noting that simply handing out T-shirts and koozies to event attendees simply doesn’t fit his style. So for his first KC Chamber Small Business Celebration Candidates’ Showcase, Moss and his team from…

        1 Million Cups relocating back to Kauffman Foundation, renewing weekly meetup’s energy, sense of purpose

        By Tommy Felts | April 3, 2025

        After more than six years connecting entrepreneurs in Midtown, 1 Million Cups Kansas City is returning to its roots — relocating the weekly event series April 9 to the Kauffman Foundation Conference Center where the now-coast-to-coast morning meetup series first percolated.  Changing the brew for the Wednesday entrepreneur pitch showcase came from the same voices…

        Why the Savannah Bananas founder is coming back to KC (with a tip of his hat to winning leadership styles)

        By Tommy Felts | April 3, 2025

        Jesse Cole isn’t afraid to reimagine the way things are done in business, he shared, and his brand of Banana Ball is paying off. In the past nine years, the ringleader of the Savannah Bananas — baseball’s answer to the trick ball-handling and exhibition athleticism of the Harlem Globetrotters — has gone from selling his…