Business Owners and the Self-Employed: Thirty-Three Million (and Counting!)
Entrepreneurs are known to be key drivers of economic growth, and the rise of online platforms and the broader "gig economy" has led self-employment to surge in recent decades. Yet the young and small businesses associated with this activity are often absent from economic data. In this paper, we explore a novel longitudinal dataset that covers the owners of tens of millions of the smallest businesses: those without employees. We produce three new sets of statistics on the rapidly growing set of nonemployer businesses. First, we measure transitions between self-employment and wage and salary jobs. Second, we describe nonemployer business entry and exit, as well as transitions between legal form (e.g., sole proprietorship to S corporation). Finally, we link owners to their nonemployer businesses and examine the dynamics of business ownership.
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Copy CitationChristopher Goetz, Henry R. Hyatt, Zachary Kroff, Kristin Sandusky, and Martha Stinson, "Business Owners and the Self-Employed: Thirty-Three Million (and Counting!)," NBER Working Paper 34252 (2025), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34252.
Published Versions
Forthcoming: Business Owners and the Self-Employed: Thirty-Three Million (And Counting!), Christopher Goetz, Henry Hyatt, Zachary Kroff, Kristin Sandusky, Martha Stinson. in The Changing Nature of Work, Houseman, Polivka, and Şahin. 2025