This report tracks the dynamics of minority-owned employer establishments that were in operation in 1997 over the period 1997-2001. The data used here track business closure, expansion, and contraction by the business owners' race or ethnicity and by their state and industry. To provide context for the discussion of business dynamics, the report also gives a summary of minority population and business growth between 1982 and 2002.
Overall Findings
Minority-owned employer establishments had lower
survival rates than non-minority-owned employer
establishments. At the same time, minority-owned
establishments had higher expansion rates and lower
contraction rates than non-minority-owned establishments.
While there was an overall loss of employment
due to business closures and contraction among
employer establishments that were in operation in
1997, employer establishments owned by Hispanics
and by American Indians and Alaska Natives offered
a significant increase in new jobs during the 1997-
2001 period.
Highlights
Minorities' share of the total U.S. population increased from 21 percent in 1982 to 32 percent in 2002. The share of businesses owned by minorities rose from 6.8 percent of all U.S. businesses in 1982 to 15.1 percent in 1997.
Hispanics were the fastest growing minority group between 1982 and 2002. The Hispanic share of U.S. population went from 7 percent in 1982 to 13.8 percent in 2002. Asian and Pacific Islanders grew second-fastest, from 1.9 percent in 1982 to 4.2 percent in 2002.
American Indians/Alaska Natives were the fastest growing business group. The number of businesses owned by American Indians or Alaska Natives grew tenfold between 1982 and 1997, followed by Hispanic-owned businesses, the number of which quadrupled during this period.
The four-year survival rates of the four minorityowned business categories were all lower than the survival rate for non-minority-owned business, which was 72.6 percent. Those for the minority categories were as follows:
Asian- and Pacific Islander-owned 72.1 percent Hispanic-owned 68.6 percent American Indian and Native Alaskan-owned 67.0 percent Black-owned 61.0 percent During 1997-2001, the business expansion rates of three minority business groups were higher than that for non-minority-owned businesses. While 27.4 percent of non-minority owned establishments expanded during this period, 34.0 percent of Hispanic-owned employer establishments expanded, as did 32.1 percent of Asian and Pacific Islanderowned establishments, and 27.8 percent of American Indian/Alaska Native-owned establishments; 25.7 percent of the Black-owned employer establishments in operation in 1997 expanded their businesses.
Hispanic- and Black-owned employer establishments had the lowest contraction rates (17.8 percent and 19.9 percent, respectively) between 1997 and 2001. By contrast, 21.1 percent of non-minorityowned businesses shrank, as did 22.4 percent of those owned by American Indian and Alaska Natives, and 22.9 percent of those owned by Asian and Pacific Islanders.
Business closure, expansion, and contraction directly influenced total employment of firms operating in 1997. The U.S. employer establishments in operation in 1997 had lost 11.5 million jobs by 2001. (Again, this dataset does not include the new businesses that started in the period 1997-2001, nor the jobs they created.) Hispanic-owned businesses operating in 1997 had created a surplus of 136,964 new jobs by 2001, and American Indian/Alaska Nativeowned businesses had created 26,050 new jobs.
During 1997-2001, the survival rate of all U.S. businesses was highest in the manufacturing sector (74 percent), followed by services (72 percent), wholesale (71 percent), and agriculture (70 percent). The lowest rate was in non-classifiable establishments (21 percent). On average, Asian Americanowned business establishments had the highest survival rate among minority establishments. Asian businesses were most resilient in the finance, insurance and real estate sector and the service sector, with 74 percent survival. The Hispanic business survival rate was highest in the manufacturing and retail sectors.
The states with the highest survival rates for minority business groups for the period 1997-2001 were as follows. Delaware had the highest survival rate for American Indian/Alaska Native-owned employer establishments (93.8 percent); Wyoming had the highest survival rate for Black-owned businesses (93.5 percent); South Carolina had the highest survival rate for Hispanic businesses (88.6 percent); New Mexico had the highest survival rate for Asian and Pacific Islander-owned firms (84.6 percent).
Data Sources and Methodology
The Census Bureau provided the Small Business
Administration's Office of Advocacy with a series of
statistical tabulations that track establishments
belonging to minority-owned business enterprises
that responded to the 1997 Survey of Minority-
Owned Business Enterprises (SMOBE). The dataset
has some significant limitations. First, it only contains
information on employer establishments, not
firms, which are a better measure of business ownership.
Second, it contains no information on establishments
that opened after 1997; it only tracks the fortunes
of those in existence in 1997.
This report was peer-reviewed consistent with
Advocacy's data quality guidelines. More information
on this process can be obtained by contacting the
director of economic research at
advocacy@sba.gov
or (202) 205-6533.
This Small Business Research Summary (No. 251, February 2005) summarizes one of a series of research papers prepared under contracts issued by the U.S. Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy. The opinions and recommendations of the authors of this study do not necessarily reflect official policies of the SBA or other agencies of the U.S. government.
