Charting small vs. large U.S. companies for job growth

RP news wires, Noria Corporation

Who creates the most jobs: small businesses or large businesses? This subject has been widely discussed among economists and researchers and is often a topic of political debates citing the important role of small businesses in creating jobs.

Percent of net employment growth by size of firms, second quarter 1990-third quarter 2005 (seasonally adjusted)
[Chart data—TXT]

New statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Business Employment Dynamics program provide data with which to analyze many of the size class methodological issues, and is a valuable data resource with which to answer these questions.

The following findings result from analysis of BLS firm size class data:

These data are from the Business Employment Dynamics program. Data presented here is for workers in private industry covered by State unemployment insurance programs. A firm is defined as an aggregation of establishments under common ownership by a corporate parent. An establishment is defined as an economic unit that produces goods or services, usually at a single physical location, and engages in one, or predominantly one, activity. Find out more in "Employment dynamics: small and large firms over the business cycle," by Jessica Helfand, Akbar Sadeghi, and David Talan, Monthly Labor Review, March 2007.