Seth Levine

The New Builders


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– 54 percent – of their earnings (a total of $2.4 trillion) to buy back their own stock. If you include dividends paid out during that period, 91 percent of earnings went to shareholders, leaving little left for reinvestment into these businesses.

      This profit seeking behavior also had an effect on small business and the overall dynamism of the economy.

      Simply put, today's entrepreneurs face a nearly impossible uphill climb because large businesses are increasingly unchecked in their market power and profitability. At the same time, rising income inequality means fewer and fewer people have the savings to start businesses, a process that often means forgoing income for several years.

      1 Market concentration has risen.

      2 Average markups have increased.

      3 Average profits have increased.

      4 The labor share of output has gone down.

      5 The rise in market concentration and the fall in labor share are positively associated.

      6 The labor productivity gap between frontier and laggard firms has widened.

      7 Firm entry rate has declined.

      8 The share of young firms in economic activity has declined.

      9 Job reallocation has slowed down.

      10 The dispersion of firm growth has decreased.

      All of these factors are important, but several have direct implications for New Builders. Specifically, increasing market concentration, increasing profits, the correlation between the rise in market concentration and the fall in labor share, new firm entry rate, and the declining share of economic activity from newer firms all describe how larger firms are making up a greater share of the market and wielding more market power.

      Of course, businesses create and shed jobs all the time. Critics of the idea that small businesses are an irreplaceable piece of the dynamic American economy have argued that studies that profess the power of small business job growth gloss over job losses incurred by those same startup firms after their first year of operations. The net job numbers for startups include only companies adding jobs; after year one, they include companies that are adding new jobs and companies that go out of business or shrink, in each case, shedding jobs.

      Robert Atkinson and Michael Lind argued the case in their book, Big Is Beautiful. It's a provocative work that argues that small businesses are in fact not responsible for most of the country's job creation and innovation. In Atkinson and Lind's worldview, the only kind of small firm that contributes to innovation are technology startups – who, they point out, ubiquitously have the goal of becoming big businesses. They believe that the idea that small businesses are the foundation of our economy is a relic of past times and nostalgic thinking. They argue that both consumers and workers are better off buying from, and working for, large businesses. In their view, new small businesses create new jobs; however, they argue that these jobs are lost over time as those businesses eventually close.

      Small businesses have a larger appetite for risk, and by virtue of their owners' passions, are sometimes willing to live with lower profits. An economy devoid of small businesses is a flat, uninspired landscape of sameness. To continue to thrive, America needs both big and small business and grassroots entrepreneurs of all backgrounds to create a living, vibrant entrepreneurial economy.