Amid recession talk, job-creating startups need government focus now, Kauffman says
September 7, 2019 | Startland News Staff
Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a sponsor of Startland News, but this report was produced independently of the Kansas City-based nonprofit.
U.S. policymakers must shift their focus from the old ways of doing business to efforts that boost entrepreneurship at the grassroots levels and target traditionally underoptimized communities, according to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
An August jobs report from the U.S. Department of Labor showed just 130,000 new jobs nationwide, including 25,000 temporary jobs tied to the 2020 census. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7 percent. (Job gains for June were 178,000, with 159,000 added in July, according to the agency.)
“Given the underwhelming August jobs numbers and increasing talk of a recession, U.S. policymakers need to shift their focus to the most important tool for creating new jobs: entrepreneurship,” the Kauffman Foundation, which tracks entrepreneurship nationwide, said Friday in response to the report. “New businesses created by entrepreneurs are the primary source of almost all net new jobs. Unfortunately, the number of new business start-ups nationwide has been essentially flat for 20 years even as the economy has grown.”
Kauffman has been sounding the alarm bell for years about stagnant startup growth, as well as emphasizing entrepreneurs’ perceptions that government is not providing the critical resources and support for them to succeed nor removing harmful obstacles to building early stage businesses.
‘Rather than focusing on old economic tools — further tax cuts, incentives, and further reductions in interest rates — we need a concerted effort from policymakers to support entrepreneurship, especially among women, people of color and rural residents,” Kauffman said in its statement Friday.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Startups, offices in path of Chiefs parade closing to party amid travel concerns
A long-awaited parade and rally celebrating the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory is set to snarl traffic across the metro Wednesday, shutting down much of the city’s downtown-to-midtown business districts — rippling across a startup community eager to join in the fanfare. Set for 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, the parade is expected to draw more…
Three months’ rent in 24 hours: How Chiefs’ Super Bowl run already MADE one brand’s 2020
Super Bowl Sunday was a holy time for members of the MADE MOBB, but it was hardly a day of rest for the team behind Kansas City’s most iconic streetwear brand. After prepping the custom T-shirt press in the back of MADE’s Crossroads storefront late Saturday — in hopes of a new, limited drop celebrating…
Chiefs’ victory parade forces TEDxKC to call an audible, move sold-out event to June
The sold-out return of TEDxKC will see a delay of game, as organizers push the popular event back four months to make room for the Kansas Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade and rally Wednesday. “For a couple of weeks, we have been doing the calculus on what we would do if the Chiefs won the…
