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{{Project|Has project output=Data,Content,How-to,Guide|Has sponsor=McNair Center|Has title=Small Business Data|Has owner=Dylan Dickens,|Has project status=Complete|Has keywords=Data}} =='''Council of Economic AdvisersSmall Business Data Sets'''=={| class="wikitablesortable" style="width: 100%;"! Year! Expert?! Name! Field of Expert! CEA Size! Percent! Grade!
|-
! style="width: 10%;" | 1979Name! style="width: 10%;" | 0| -Link! style="width: 45%;" | -Description| 13| 0.00! style="width: 35%| F;" | Data Summary
|-
| 1980Dynamic Small Business Search| 0http://dsbs.sba.gov/dsbs/search/dsp_dsbs.cfm| -| -| 15| 0The Small Business Administration maintains the Dynamic Small Business Search (DSBS) database. As a small business registers in the System for Award Management, there is an opportunity to fill out the small business profile. The information provided populates DSBS. DSBS is another tool contracting officers use to identify potential small business contractors for upcoming contracting opportunities. Small businesses can also use DSBS to identify other small businesses for teaming and joint venturing.00%| F|
|-
| 1981Office of Advocacy News| 0| -| -https://www.sba.gov/advocacy| 16| 0The News Update File is an xml news update file to inform the public about recent regulatory alerts, Advocacy small business statistics reports, Advocacy small business research reports, and Advocacy regulatory comment letters.00%| F| [[Category:Small Business]]
|-
| 1982State Licenses & Permits| 0| -| -| 15| 0Identifies the specific licenses or permits a business may need depending on the type of business, its location, and applicable government rules.00%| F|
|-
| 1983FDIC| 0| -| -| 15| 0https://www5.fdic.gov/qbp/index.00%| Fasp| Private sector loans to small businesses
|-
| 1984World Bank | 0http://www.doingbusiness.org|The World Bank’s Doing Business series, dating to 2001, is an annual compendium and international ranking of regulatory measures impacting small business, such as the number of days it takes to legally register a business. Different aspects appear each year.|Doing Business offers economic data from 2003 to the present. The data is presented in a variety of ways useful to researchers, policy makers, journalists and others| -| -| 12Kauffman Foundation| 0http://www.00%| Fkauffman.org/section.aspx?id=research_and_policy | Studies and data on small business and entrepreneurship
|-
| 1985Warrington College of Business| 0https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/ipo-data/| -IPO data| Up to date information on IPO's including: Underpricing, tech stocks, age, price revisions, sales, underwriting, foreign, long run returns, VC-backed IPOs from late 1900s -| 14| 0.00%| F| 2015
|-
| 1986Bureau of Labor Statistics| 0http://www.bls.gov/bdm/| -Highlights from data series produced by BLS Business Employment Dynamics (BED) program provide some insights on the contribution of new and small businesses to the number of businesses and jobs in the economy.| -| 15| 0Set of statistics generated from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages program.00%| F| *junior staff with IO These quarterly data series consist of gross job gains and Finance Darrel Lgross job losses statistics from 1992 forward. Williams
|-
| 1987Federal Procurement Data System| 0| -| -| 12https://www.fpds.gov/fpdsng_cms/index.php/en/reports| 0A Department level report that displays Small Business data for a specified date range by Funding/Contracting Agency.00%| F| *junior staff with IOThis report displays the dollars, actions, Regulation and Finance Randall S. Krosznerpercentages for small business contracts in FY 2016 and goes back all the way to FY 1981
|-
| 1988| 0PayNet small Business Lending Index| http://www.paynetonline.com/issues-and-solutions/all-paynet-products/small-business-lending-| index-sbli/| 13PayNet specializes in loan data and has a database which includes information on more than 20 million loans and leases. For these indexes, PayNet uses the data from US companies which have less than $1 million in total outstanding loans.| 0The Small Business Lending Index (SBLI) measure the volume of small business loans issued over the past 30 days and are based on the most recent data from the largest commercial and industrial lenders in PayNet's U.S. database, including both loans and leases.00%| F|
|-
| 1989| 0| -Paychex| http://www.paychex.com/jobs-index/index.aspx| 13Paychex tracks changes in the employment levels of 350K small businesses with <50 employees | 0The data for the jobs index comes from a subset of the Paychex client base, approximately 350,000 businesses with less than 50 workers in the U.00%| F| S
|-
| 1990ADP small business report| http://www.adpemploymentreport.com/2015/March/SBS/SBS-NER-March-2015.aspx|The ADP Small Business Report provides the number of jobs created or lost by company size (1-19 employees, 20-49) and sector (goods or services). A seperate report details job gains and losses for national franchises.| Adam BThe ADP National Employment Report® is published monthly by the ADP Research Institute® in close collaboration with Moody’s Analytics and its experienced team of labor market researchers. The ADP National Employment Report provides a monthly snapshot of U.S. nonfarm private sector employment based on actual transactional payroll data. Jaffe| Regulation, Energy, and R&D-| 13Intuit Small Business Index| 7http://www.69%intuit.com/company/press-room/press-releases/2015/Small-Business-Employment-Remained-Stagnant-in-October1/| AThe index measures compensation, hours worked, and revenue for companies with <20 employees| The Employment Index is based on anonymized, non-identifiable aggregated data from 271,750 small business employers, a subset of users of Intuit Online Payroll and QuickBooks Online. The Revenue Index is based on anonymized, non-identifiable aggregated data from 240,000 small businesses, a subset of users of Intuit’s QuickBooks Online with industry identification from Dun & Bradstreet.
|-
| 1991| 0Statistic Brain| http://www.statisticbrain.com/startup-failure-| by-industry/| | 0.00%| FStartup Business Failure rates by industry|
|-
| 1992The National Venture Capital Association Yearbook| 0http://nvca.org/research/stats-studies/| Andrew S. JoskowDetails the state of the venture capital market in a given year| RegulationPrimary data sources included:SEC filings that are regularly monitored by Thomson Reuters’ research staff, EnergySurveys of the industry routinely conducted by Thomson Reuters, and Industrial Organization| 13| 0 Verified industry press and press releases from venture firms.00%| B|
|-
| 1993NFIB Small Business Report| 0http://www.nfib.com/surveys/small-business-economic-trends/| Jonathan B. BakerMeasures economic trends in small businesses| Regulation, Industrial Organization, The NFIB Research Foundation has collected Small Business Economic Trends data with quarterly surveys since the 4th quarter of 1973 and Law| 16| 0monthly surveys since 1986. Survey respondents are drawn from NFIB’s membership. The report is released on the second Tuesday of each month. This survey was conducted in March 2016.00%| B|
|-
| 1994Medical Expenditure Panel Survey| 0http://meps.ahrq.gov/mepsweb/| Jonathan BA set of large-scale surveys of families and individuals, their medical providers, and employers across the United States. BakerMEPS is the most complete source of data on the cost and use of health care and health insurance coverage| Regulation, Industrial Organization, The Household Component data are based on questionnaires fielded to individual household members and Lawtheir medical providers. The Insurance Component estimates come from a survey of employers conducted to collect health insurance plan information| 15-| 0SBA Lenders|https://www.sba.00%gov/lenders-top-100| BSBA lending data| Table displaying the 100 most active SBA 7a lenders in the US by lending volume in FY 2016 through Q2
|-
| 1995Kaiser Family Foundation| 0http://kff.org/health-costs/report/2015-employer-health-benefits-survey/| Marius SchwartzAnnual Survey of employers providing a detailed look at trends in employer-sponsored health coverage | Regulation, Industrial OrganizationThe 2015 survey included almost 2, 000 interviews with non-federal public and Antitrust| 15| 0private firms.00%| B|
|-
| 1996Federal Reserve| 0http://www.federalreserve.gov/communitydev/small-businesses-data-analysis.htm| Timothy JMany Reserve Banks monitor trends and credit market conditions for small and new businesses. BrennanThe polling efforts of the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Atlanta are two examples of System work to better understand small business trends| RegulationThe SBCS captures the perspectives of businesses with fewer than 500 employees in New York, Industrial OrganizationNew Jersey, Connecticut, and Antitrust| 13| 0Pennsylvania. There were 835 responses to the survey fielded from April 3, 2014 to June 20, 2014. The Atlanta Fed conducted the first-quarter 2014 survey during the first four weeks of April.00%| B| The survey was completed by 562 respondents
|-
| 1997| 0Entrepeneur.com report| Aaron Shttps://www. Edlin| Regulation, Industrial Organization, and Antitrust| 13| 0entrepreneur.00%| Bcom/page/216022| Comprehensive statistics on small business trends in the United States for various years
|-
| 1998United States Census Bureau| 0https://www.census.gov/econ/sbo/getdata.html| Howard A. ShelanskiStatistics for Owner's of Small businesses in 2012| Regulation1.75 million businesses were selected for the survey. Survey included are all nonfarm businesses filing Internal Revenue Service tax forms as individual proprietorships, partnerships, Industrial Organizationor any type of corporation, and Antitrust| 11| 0with receipts of $1,000 or more.00%| B|
|-
| 1999Small Business Dashboard| 0| William Hhttp://smallbusiness.data. Gillespiegov/| Industrial OrganizationInformation on small business contracting activities| 12| 0ncludes procurement contract transactions reported directly through the contract writing systems of approximately 65 U.S.00%Government, Executive Branch, departments, bureaus, agencies, and commissions| BData spans contract transactions from FY 2000 onwards| SmallBusinessDashboard.gov is updated with FPDS-NG data on a daily basis
|-
| 2000411 Small Business Facts| 0http://www.411sbfacts.com/| Peter GSortable database of over 60 separate small business surveys|411SmallBusinessFacts.com is a searchable data base of approximately 2,000 facts about American small businesses and their owners (or managers) produced by the NFIB Research Foundation. The Foundation developed this information from telephone surveys of small employers – those employing from one person in addition to the owner(s) to 250. Data collection began in 2001 and continues through the present. Klein| Industrial Organization-| 11Survey of Minority Owned Businesses| 0http://www.mbda.gov/sites/default/files/2012SBO_MBEFactSheet020216.00%pdf| BData set attempting to give a comprehensive outlook to the state of minority business enterprises in the US| Minority owned business fact sheet created in January 2016
|-
| 2001NASE| 0http://www.nase.org/| A trade association that provides day-to-| day support for micro-| 11| 0businesses, including direct access to experts, benefits, and consolidated buying power that is traditionally only available to large corporations. The association is the largest nonprofit, nonpartisan association of its kind in the United States.00%| F| Presents statistics and facts on self employed members of the US economy from the 1990's to the late 2000s
|-
| 2002Federal Reserve board| 0https://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/oss/oss3/nssbftoc.htm| Cindy R. AlexanderFederal reserve board survey of small business finances| Industrial OrganizationBalance sheets of the firm are some examples of the types of information collected. Working papers and methodology reports, codebooks and other related documentation, and the full public data sets are available here for the 2003, 1998, Corporate Finance1993, and Regulation| 11| 0.00%| B| 1987 SSBFs
|-
| 2003| 0}| -| -| 11=='''Survey Respondents on Small Business Issues'''=={| 0.00class="wikitable sortable" style="width: 100%| F| ;"
|-
! style="width: 5%;" | 2004Survey! style="width: 1%;" | 0Date! style="width: 20%;"| -Labor Markets! style="width: 20%;"| -Capital ! style="width: 20%;"| 11Sales | 0.00! style="width: 25%;"| FGeneral Outlook! style="width: 9%;" | Data
|-
| 2005| 0| [http://www.nfib.com/assets/SBET-| February-| 12| 02016.00%pdf SBET February 2016] | FFebruary 2016
|
*42% of businesses in the survey report few or no qualified applicants for a position that they were trying to fill
|
*4% of small business owners surveyed reported that company borrowing needs were not met
|
*11% cite weak sales as their principal business problem
|
*Spending and hiring plans fell as expectations for growth in real sales volumes declined
|
('''N=2194''', Data was obtained from membership files of the NFIB)
|-
| 2006| 0| Kristin McCue| Labor, [http://newsroom.bankofamerica.com/files/press_kit/additional/Small_Business_Owner_Report_-_Fall_2015.pdf Small Business, and Economic Development| 11| 0.00%| BOwner report]
|
Fall 2015
|
*67% planned to hire 12+ employees within 2015
|
*46% of small businesses surveyed cite credit availability as their primary concern
|
*28% of businesses say they will use recently acquired funding to develop a new product or service within the next year
|
*56% say they expect the US economy to improve within the next 12 months
*72% of small businesses expect their revenue to increase for the year
|('''N=1,001''' small business owners in
the US with annual revenue $100,000<x<$4,999,999 and employing
between 2<x<99 employees)
|-
| 2007[https://wellsfargoworks.com/File/Index/J6WCK2WHn0yd-wrTX8btvA WellsFargo survey]| 0January 2016| John Stevens*26% of small businesses expect to hire in Q1 2016*66% of businesses expect the number of jobs to stay the same*11% of businesses say that hiring and retaining qualified staff is their most pressing problem| Macroeconomics, Labor, Small Business*19% of businesses responded that obtaining credit was difficult*5% of say cash flow and financial stability as the company's biggest problem*4% of businesses surveyed speculate credit availability may be prohibiting company growth| 11*14% experienced difficulty attracting customers in Q1 2016*38% of businesses surveyed stated a positive revenue increase in Q1 2016| 0.00*67% of small businesses regard their financial situation as good or very good in Q1 2016*71%expect a positive financial future within the next 12 months | B*8% of small businesses say that the economy is the principal problem their business is facing | ('''N=600''' small business owners in Q1 2016)
|-
| 2008[http://www.vistage.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/WSJ-CEO-Survey-0116.pdf WSJ survey]| 0January 2016| -*54% of businesses surveyed said they expect firm size to increase| -*40% of businesses reported that they expect their firm's fixed investment expenditures to increase during the next 12 mo.| 11| 0.00*73% report an expected sales increase within the year *54%of firms expect their profitability to improve| F*Investments in new plant and equipment have fallen to their lowest level in more than two years*20% of firms expect the economy to worsen in the year ahead—the highest level in more than two years.|
|-
| 2009[https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/smallbusiness/SBCS-2014-Report.pdf NY Fed Survey]| 0| -2014| -| 9*27% of businesses reported an increase in their full time staff| 0.00*15%reported a decrease in their full time staff| F*58% of respondents reported no change in their employee base| |*23% of businesses reported 10-25K of debt| 2010*62% of businesses had applied for <100K of financing| 1*41% responded they'd sought financing from a large regional bank | Ronnie Chatterji| Entrepreneurship *35% of respondents reported increasing revenues and Innovationpositive profitability*23% of businesses said they'd experienced difficulty in attracting customers| 10| 10.00*29% of businesses reported personal savings as their primary financing source*29%of businesses operated at a loss | A*13% of respondents said the increasing costs of running their business was their principal concern
|
10 states of coverage: Alabama, Connecticut,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, New Jersey,
New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee with businesses <500.
|
|}
 
=='''Holy Grail FDIC Data'''==
https://www5.fdic.gov/sdi/main.asp
 
=='''Minorities in Small Business'''==
 
=='''Council of Economic Advisers'''==
{| class="wikitable"
! Year
! Expert?
! Name
! Field of Expert
! CEA Size
! Percent
! Grade
!
|-
| 20111979| 20| Lee G. Bransetter; Lisa D. Cook-| International Trade and Investment, Innovation, and Manufacturing; International Finance, Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Development-| 1113| 180.1800%| AF
|
|-
| 20121980| 10| Susan Helper-| Manufacturing, Innovation, Small Business-| 1115| 90.0900%| AF
|
|-
| 20131981
| 0
| David Balan-| Industrial Organization, Technology, Health-| 1216
| 0.00%
| BF
|
|-
| 20141982| 10| Timothy Simcoe-| Innovation, Technology, Industrial Organization-| 1115| 90.0900%| AF
|
|-
| 20151983| 10| Robert C. Seamans-| Innovation, Technology, Industrial Organization-| 1115| 90.0900%| AF
|
|-
| 20161984| 10| Victor Bennet-| Innovation, Technology, Industrial Organization-| 1312| 70.6900%| AF| |-| 1985| 0| -| -| 14| 0.00%| F
|
|}
 
=='''Firm Births & Deaths'''==
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="3" | Quarterly Establishment Births and Deaths, 1993-2015
|-
| Quarter1986| Births0| Deaths-| -| 15| 0.00%| F| *junior staff with IO and Finance Darrel L. Williams
|-
| Mar-931987| 0
| -
| 167,000-|-12| Jun-930.00%| 181,000F| 160*junior staff with IO,000Regulation and Finance Randall S. Kroszner
|-
| Sep1988| 0| -93| 191,000-| 13| 0.00%| F| 148,000
|-
| Dec1989| 0| -93| 182,000-| 13| 0.00%| F| 154,000
|-
| Mar-941990| 1851| Adam B. Jaffe| Regulation,000Energy, and R&D| 13| 7.69%| A| 164,000
|-
| Jun1991| 0| -94| 196,000-| | 0.00%| F| 162,000
|-
| Sep-941992| 2010| Andrew S. Joskow| Regulation,000Energy, and Industrial Organization| 13| 0.00%| B| 156,000
|-
| Dec-941993| 1920| Jonathan B. Baker| Regulation,000Industrial Organization, and Law| 16| 0.00%| B| 174,000
|-
| Mar-951994| 1970| Jonathan B. Baker| Regulation,000Industrial Organization, and Law| 15| 0.00%| B| 161,000
|-
| Jun-951995| 1930| Marius Schwartz| Regulation,000Industrial Organization, and Antitrust| 15| 0.00%| B| 167,000
|-
| Sep-951996| 193,0000| Timothy J. Brennan| 168Regulation, Industrial Organization,000and Antitrust|-13| Dec-950.00%| 195,000B| 174,000
|-
| Mar-961997| 2040| Aaron S. Edlin| Regulation,000Industrial Organization, and Antitrust| 13| 0.00%| B| 173,000
|-
| Jun-961998| 198,0000| Howard A. Shelanski| 171Regulation, Industrial Organization,000and Antitrust|-11| Sep-960.00%| 205,000B| 174,000
|-
| Dec-961999| 216,0000| William H. Gillespie| Industrial Organization| 12| 0.00%| B| 175,000
|-
| Mar-972000| 211,0000| 180,000Peter G. Klein|-Industrial Organization| Jun-9711| 210,0000.00%| B| 175,000
|-
| Sep2001| 0| -97| 207,000-| 11| 0.00%| F| 173,000
|-
| Dec-972002| 200,0000| Cindy R. Alexander| 189Industrial Organization, Corporate Finance,000and Regulation|-11| Mar-980.00%| 222,000B| 186,000
|-
| Jun2003| 0| -98| 226,000-| 11| 0.00%| F| 173,000
|-
| Sep-982004| 209,0000| 185,000-|-| Dec-9811| 0.00%| 203,000F| 188,000
|-
| Mar2005| 0| -99| 213,000-| 12| 0.00%| F| 194,000
|-
| Jun-992006| 219,0000| Kristin McCue| 192Labor, Small Business,000and Economic Development|-11| Sep-990.00%| 209,000B| 194,000
|-
| Dec-992007| 2240| John Stevens| Macroeconomics,000Labor, Small Business| 11| 0.00%| B| 189,000
|-
| Mar-002008| 227,0000| 196,000-|-| Jun-11| 0.00%| 218,000F| 189,000
|-
| Sep2009| 0| -| -| 9| 0.00%| 222,000F| 209,000
|-
| Dec-002010| 1| 215,000Ronnie Chatterji| 204,000Entrepreneurship and Innovation|-10| 1-Mar10.00%| 220,000A| 214,000
|-
| 1-Jun2011| 2172| Lee G. Bransetter; Lisa D. Cook| International Trade and Investment, Innovation, and Manufacturing; International Finance, Entrepreneurship,000Innovation and Development| 11| 18.18%| A| 212,000
|-
| 2012| 1-Sep| 218,000Susan Helper| 219Manufacturing,000Innovation, Small Business|-11| 1-Dec9.09%| 209,000A| 208,000
|-
| 2-Mar2013| 2190| David Balan| Industrial Organization,000Technology, Health| 12| 0.00%| B| 199,000
|-
| 2-Jun2014| 228,0001| Timothy Simcoe| 196Innovation, Technology,000Industrial Organization|-11| 2-Sep9.09%| 217,000A| 193,000
|-
| 2-Dec2015| 2161| Robert C. Seamans| Innovation,000Technology, Industrial Organization| 11| 9.09%| A| 200,000
|-
| 3-Mar2016| 1| Victor Bennet| 215Innovation, Technology,000Industrial Organization| 13| 7.69%| 194,000A|-| 3} =='''Firm Size & Employment'''==Holy Grail Data: https://www.sba.gov/advocacy/firm-size-JundataInside E\McNair\Projects\Small Business as SBA Industry and Firm Size Statistics =='''Firm Births & Deaths'''=={| 212,000class="wikitable"! colspan="3" | 194Quarterly Establishment Births and Deaths,0001993-2015
|-
| 3-SepQuarter| 210,000Births| 191,000Deaths
|-
| 3Mar-Dec93| 218,000-| 191167,000
|-
| 4Jun-Mar93| 222181,000| 193160,000
|-
| 4Sep-Jun93| 218191,000| 196148,000
|-
| 4Dec-Sep93| 224182,000| 196154,000
|-
| 4Mar-Dec94| 226185,000| 191164,000
|-
| 5Jun-Mar| 227,00094
| 196,000
| 162,000
|-
| 5Sep-Jun94| 232201,000| 156,000|-| Dec-94
| 192,000
| 174,000
|-
| Mar-95
| 197,000
| 161,000
|-
| 5Jun-Sep95| 236193,000| 195167,000
|-
| 5Sep-Dec95| 236193,000| 200168,000
|-
| 6Dec-Mar| 236,00095
| 195,000
| 174,000
|-
| 6Mar-Jun96| 233204,000| 206173,000
|-
| 6Jun-Sep96| 224198,000| 210171,000
|-
| 6Sep-Dec| 236,000| 207,000|-| 7-Mar| 232,00096
| 205,000
| 174,000
|-
| 7Dec-Jun96| 225216,000| 215175,000
|-
| 7Mar-Sep97| 233211,000| 216180,000
|-
| 7Jun-Dec97| 228210,000| 218175,000
|-
| 8Sep-Mar97| 226207,000| 224173,000
|-
| 8Dec-Jun97| 221200,000| 238189,000
|-
| 8Mar-Sep98| 216222,000| 233186,000
|-
| 8Jun-Dec98| 211226,000| 253173,000
|-
| 9Sep-Mar98| 197209,000| 247185,000
|-
| 9Dec-Jun98| 201203,000| 238188,000
|-
| 9Mar-Sep99| 213,000| 194,000|-| Jun-99| 219,000
| 192,000
|-
| Sep-99
| 209,000
| 194,000
|-
| Dec-99
| 224,000
| 189,000
|-
| Mar-00
| 227,000
| 196,000
|-
| 9Jun-Dec| 202,00000
| 218,000
| 189,000
|-
| 10Sep-Mar00| 193222,000| 211209,000
|-
| 10Dec-Jun00| 193,000| 202,000|-| 10-Sep| 207215,000
| 204,000
|-
| 101-DecMar| 216220,000| 201214,000
|-
| 111-MarJun| 204217,000| 200212,000
|-
| 111-JunSep| 210218,000| 206219,000|-| 1-Dec| 209,000| 208,000|-| 2-Mar| 219,000| 199,000
|-
| 112-SepJun| 205228,000
| 196,000
|-
| 112-DecSep| 214217,000| 198193,000
|-
| 122-Mar| 237,000| 187,000|-| 12-JunDec
| 216,000
| 195200,000
|-
| 123-Mar| 215,000| 194,000|-| 3-Jun| 212,000| 194,000|-| 3-Sep| 211210,000| 196191,000
|-
| 123-Dec
| 218,000
| 183191,000
|-
| 134-Mar| 204,000| 192,000|-| 13-Jun
| 222,000
| 215193,000
|-
| 134-SepJun| 219218,000| 195196,000
|-
| 134-DecSep| 215224,000| 186196,000
|-
| 144-MarDec| 220226,000| 189191,000
|-
| 145-JunMar| 220227,000| -196,000
|-
| 145-Jun| 232,000| 192,000|-| 5-Sep| 225236,000| 195,000| -| 5-Dec| 236,000| 200,000
|-
| 146-DecMar| 223236,000| -195,000
|-
| 156-MarJun
| 233,000
| -206,000
|-
| colspan="3" | Note: Dashes indicate not applicable.|}6-Sep[[File:Establishment Births and Deaths.png|thumb|center|upright=2.0]]Source: http://www.bls.gov/bdm/entrepreneurship/bdm_chart5.htm =='''Small Business Portion of GDP'''==224,000{| class="wikitable"! ! 1998! ! 1999! ! 2000! ! 2001! ! 2002! ! 2003! ! 2004! 210,000
|-
| Private NonFarm GDP6-Dec| Dollars236,000| Percent207,000| Dollars-| Percent7-Mar| Dollars232,000| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent205,000
|-
| Small Business GDP7-Jun| 3225,578,026000| 50.50%215,000| 3836070-| 50.50%7-Sep| 4,068233,879| 50.30%000| 4,190216,264| 50.30%000| 4,139,771-| 48.30%7-Dec| 4,299228,941| 48.10%000| 4,522218,139| 47.50%000
|-
| Compensation8-Mar| 1226,951,708000| 48.30%224,000| 2076019-| 47.70%8-Jun| 2,231221,086| 47.20%000| 2,287238,128| 46.90%000| 2,334,808-| 47.30%8-Sep| 2,410216,676| 47.00%000| 2,520233,466| 46.90%000
|-
| Nonlabor Components8-Dec| 1211,626,318000| 53.40%253,000| 1760051-| 54.30%9-Mar| 1,837197,793| 54.80%000| 1,903247,136| 55.00%000| 1,804,963-| 49.50%9-Jun| 1,889201,265| 49.50%000| 2,001238,673| 48.30%000
|-
| Large Business GDP9-Sep| 3192,506,662000| 49.50%227,000| 3757240-| 49.50%9-Dec| 4,016202,765| 49.70%000| 4,143218,305| 49.70%000| 4,439,604-| 51.70%10-Mar| 4,646193,881| 51.90%000| 4,998211,306| 52.50%000
|-
| Compensation10-Jun| 2193,089,914000| 51.70%202,000| 2276711-| 52.30%10-Sep| 2207,498,680000| 52.80%204,000| 2,586,543-| 53.10%-Dec| 2216,599,265000| 52.70%| 2201,719,761| 53.00%| 2,852,510| 53.10%000
|-
| Nonlabor Components11-Mar| 1204,416,748000| 46.60%200,000| 1480529-| 45.70%11-Jun| 1,518210,085| 45.20%000| 1,556206,762| 45.00%000| 1,840,339-| 50.50%11-Sep| 1,927205,120| 50.50%000| 2,145196,796| 51.70%000
|-
| 11-Dec! 2005| 214,000| 198,000! 2006|-| ! 200712-Mar| ! 2008237,000| ! 2009187,000| ! 2010-| 12-Jun| 216,000| 195,000
|-
| Private NonFarm GDP12-Sep| Dollars211,000| Percent196,000| Dollars-| Percent12-Dec| Dollars218,000| Percent183,000| Dollars-| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent13-Mar| 204,000| 192,000
|-
| Small Business GDP13-Jun| 4222,698,197000| 46.30%215,000| 4,948,040-| 46.10%13-Sep| 5219,182,230000| 46.20%195,000| 5,217,082-| 45.80%13-Dec| 5,080215,329| 46.00%000| 5186,210,469| 44.60%| | 000
|-
| Compensation14-Mar| 2220,650,841| 46.70%000| 2,788189,759| 46.30%000| 2,902,857-| 45.90%14-Jun| 2,951220,310000| 45.70%-| 2,772,211-| 45.20%14-Sep| 2,809225,979| 44.80%| 000| -
|-
| Nonlabor Components14-Dec| 2223,047,356| 45.90%| 2159281| 45.90%| 2,279,373| 46.60%| 2,265,772000| 46.00%-| 2,308,118-| 47.00%15-Mar| 2233,400,490| 44.40%| 000| -
|-
| Large Business GDPcolspan="3" | 5,443,589Note: Dashes indicate not applicable.| 53.70%}| 5,781,123[[File:Establishment Births and Deaths.png| 53.90%thumb| 6,025,888center| 53upright=2.80%0]]| 6,165,202| 54Source: http://www.20%| 5,971,081| 54bls.00%| 6,465,158| 55gov/bdm/entrepreneurship/bdm_chart5.40%htm| | =='''Small Business Portion of GDP'''=={|-class="wikitable"| Compensation! | 3,029,170! 1998| 53.30%! | 3,234,894! 1999| 53.70%! | 3,418,722! 2000| 54.10%! | 3,505,231! 2001| 54.30%! | 3,365,906! 2002| 54.80%! | 3,455,528! 2003| 55.20%! | ! 2004| !
|-
| Nonlabor ComponentsPrivate NonFarm GDP| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent| Dollars| Percent|-| Small Business GDP| 23,414578,419026| 50.50%| 3836070| 5450.1050%| 24,546068,229879| 5450.1030%| 24,607190,166264| 5350.4030%| 24,659139,971771| 5448.0030%| 24,605299,175941| 5348.0010%| 34,009522,630139| 5547.6050%| -| Compensation|}1,951,708 Source:https://www| 48.sba.gov/sites/default/files/rs390tot_1.pdf30%| 2076019=='''Big Data for Small Business'''== "PROGRAM CHANGE:BIG DATA FOR SMALL BUSINESS ($1| 47.9M / 9 FTE)70%Small businesses are a critical element of the overall economy and are often at the leading edge ofrisk-taking| 2, entrepreneurship231, and economic growth086| 47. Yet, unlike large corporations who have staffs of20%economists| 2, advisors287, and consultants to assist in interpreting and understanding the economy and128guiding investments, small businesses largely depend on limited publicly-available data| 46.90%Recognizing this| 2, and the Department’s role in supporting small business growth and decision-making334,808as well as the need for more insight into the health of the small business sector, BEA proposes a new| 47.30%suite of small business data products. To inform policy| 2, as well as Main Street decision-making410, BEA676proposes to expand data on small business by developing a Small Business Satellite Account includinga new Small Business GDP to track the overall growth and health of America’s small business sector| 47.00%This will be a key new measure| 2, offering insight into the leading edge of the economy520, as small466businesses are often the first to react to growth or contraction in their sectors or regions, often reactingto changes in policy before larger corporations| 46. Gaining such insight will also fulfill a key lesson learned90%from the 2008 financial crisis in terms of expanding the granularity of data on business activity.|-In addition to the new Small Business GDP measure, the small business satellite account will present| Nonlabor Componentsnew data on the distribution of small businesses by size of employment and sales; legal form ofbusiness| 1, taxes626, and net income; by industry; and by region of the country318| 53. This data will provide40%meaningful descriptions and the ability to understand trends over time regarding the changes in| 1760051| 54.30%composition| 1, industry837, and geography of the small business sector793| 54. In addition to supporting good80%public policy at the national level| 1, these data will also be of substantial value to state and local903,136government as well as business development officials in understanding their regional economicdynamics| 55.00%Coupled with BEA’s other products| 1, such as GDP by State and Real State Personal Income804, these963new statistics will represent a wealth of new information to guide small business growth and policy| 49.50%Beyond the public policy arena, expanding the Department’s data offerings to this essentialconstituency will only further enhance the ability of America’s entrepreneurs to innovate| 1, grow889, and lead265successful businesses| 49.50%There are no risks to the development and production of new data| 2, and particularly not as it relates to a001,673new satellite account focusing on small businesses| 48. In this case, particularly given that no new data30%ESA |- 26EXHIBIT 12 – 15| Large Business GDPcollection is proposed (the new account will be built from existing| 3, primarily administrative506, data), and662thus no additional burden will be placed on businesses to develop the necessary data| 49.50%| 3757240The opportunities presented by this proposal are considerable given the well-defined record of| 49.50%accomplishment of accurate| 4, reliable016, official statistical data providing the knowledge basis for765economic growth as well as smart decisions in the public policy sector| 49.70%Further| 4, the benefit of this initiative to the Department goes to the heart of the Department’s role in143,305economic policy – the Department is the primary source of actionable statistics on the state of the| 49.70%economy| 4,439,604| 51. Along with the daily provision of weather information70%| 4, the weekly issuance of economic646,881indicators is one of the Department’s most important and visible functions| 51. Expanding the Department’s90%data offerings to such an important constituency is a highly valuable proposition for both the| 4,998,306Department as well as policy and business sectors| 52.50%The risk of not pursuing this proposal is perpetuating the continued lack of direct knowledge of the|-economic health of the small business sector and what that sector can tell us about the health of the| Compensationoverall economy. There is a clear need and desire for this information| 2,089, as demonstrated by multiple914efforts over the years by SBA and various trade associations to develop similar data sets| 51. BEA is70%uniquely suited to develop this data set given its role as the custodian of the nation’s economic| 2276711accounts| 52. Further, data on small businesses published by BEA will have the official imprimatur of BEA30%as well as the full| 2, symmetric498, and broad access to the data that is true for all BEA data products680| 52.80%Also of importance is that| 2, as a BEA data set586, the Small Business Satellite Account will provide data in543| 53.10%a consistent times series| 2, as well as in a format and methodology consistent with all of BEA’s accounts599,265thus allowing expanded analysis in full context| 52.70%Given the role and importance of small businesses in economic growth and recovery| 2,719, the addition of761new and better information to assist small business decision-making and investment will only serve tosupport small business success| 53. This is an outstanding opportunity for the Department to expand its00%service offering to this critical constituency.| 2,852,510Costs are largely personnel in nature, with a $500k expected expenditure on data purchase| 53.10%ESA |- 27EXHIBIT 12 – 15| Nonlabor ComponentsTargets without increase| 1,416,748FY| 46.60%2016| 1480529FY| 45.70%2017| 1,518,085FY2018FY2019FY2020Score on Customer SatisfactionSurveyGreaterthan 4| 45.020%Greater| 1,556,762than 4| 45.000%Greater| 1,840,339than 4| 50.050%Greater| 1,927,120than 4| 50.050%Greater| 2,145,796than 4| 51.070%Complete all Major Strategic|-Plan milestones related to| improving the economic! 2005accounts| Successfully complete related milestones! 2006Targets with increase| FY! 20072016| FY! 20082017| FY! 20092018| FY! 20102019| FY| 2020| Score on Customer Satisfaction|-Survey| Private NonFarm GDPGreater| Dollarsthan 4.0| PercentGreater| Dollarsthan 4.1| PercentGreater| Dollarsthan 4.1| PercentGreater| Dollarsthan 4.1| PercentGreater| Dollarsthan 4.1| PercentComplete all Major Strategic| DollarsPlan milestones related to| Percentimproving the economic| accounts| Successfully complete additional milestones|-specifically tied to initiative goals| Small Business GDPStatement of Need and Economic Benefits| 4,698,197The additional economic statistics resulting from the implementation of this proposal will provide policy| 46.30%makers| 4, the Administration948, and the Department of Commerce with key information to assess the040economic health and capacity of the small business sector to engage in economic activity| 46. Small10%businesses comprise a large portion of the business sector in the U.S. and are often the leading edge| 5,182,230of economic growth and contraction; yet no current Federal statistical programs exist to provide acomplete picture of the small business sector| 46. While some features of the sector are measured in20%varying ways| 5, this proposal will pull them together into a concise picture217, allowing policy makers and082business leaders to assess and anticipate small business economic capacity and respond accordingly| 45.80%Specific economic benefits of this investment:• As has been demonstrated repeatedly since the introduction of regular| 5, consistent080, publicsector329economic data in the 1930s, detailed and quality economic statistics contribute| 46.00%significantly to the overall stability of the economy| 5, which itself contributes to economic growth.Specific cost savings:• While this proposal will not result in cost savings to BEA210, it will result in significantly improved469economic statistics| 44. These improved and expanded statistics will provide the right information60%to develop policies and affect business investments that will improve U.S. competitiveness and| create new jobs.|  ESA |- 28EXHIBIT 12 – 15| CompensationPossible return on investment:• The return on investment to the Bureau| 2, and the nation650, is significant, as this initiative will serve841to fill notable existing gaps in official government statistics and will provide highly valuable new| 46.70%detail on the small business sector, its composition| 2, employment788, and growth by region and759industry| 46. Of great value to economic policy makers30%| 2, this new data will also be of high value to902,857the business community, in particular small businesses| 45. Major corporations have staffs of90%economists| 2, advisors951, and consultants assisting in interpreting and understanding the economy310and guiding investments – small businesses do not| 45.70%• Better statistics allow policies to be more accurately calibrated and optimized by permitting a| 2,772,211more accurate assessment of their costs and benefits| 45. The potential gains from this initiative20%will certainly far exceed the relatively small cost| 2,809,979| 44.80%Schedule and Milestones:| FY16: Research and develop methodology; conduct outreach to stakeholders to gain additional| information; and expand collaboration with other Federal agency stakeholders.|-FY17: Publish methodology papers and develop initial estimates; present and secure endorsement of| Nonlabor Componentsmethodology and initial estimates from BEA Advisory Committee| 2,047,356FY18: Publish prototype satellite account| 45.90%FY19: Publish official data series| 2159281Deliverables:| 45.90%Papers| 2,279, prototype data series and final official data series published on an annual basis373| 46.60%ESA - 29| 2,265,772EXHIBIT 12 – 15| 46.00%PROGRAM CHANGE PERSONNEL DETAIL| 2,308,118(Actual Dollars)| 47.00%Budget Program: Bureau of Economic Analysis| 2,400,490Sub-program: National Economic Accounts| 44.40%Program Change: Big Data for Small Business| Title Band Interval Number| Annual|-Salary Total Salary| Large Business GDPSenior Economist V 1 1 152| 5,087 152443,087589Senior Economist IV 1 2 128,575 257,150| 53.70%Economist III 1 3 87| 5,411 262781,233123Economist II 1 4 64,633 258,532| 53.90%IT Specialist III 1 2 92| 6,802 185025,604888Total 12 1,115,606| 53.80%Less Lapse (3) (278| 6,902)Total Full-time permanent (FTE) 9 836165,7042022015 Pay Adjustment (1| 54.020%) 8| 5,367971,0812016 Pay Adjustment (1| 54.300%) 10| 6,986Total 856465,057158Personnel Data| 55.40%Full-time Equivalent Employment:| Full-time permanent 9| Other than full|-time permanent 0Total 9| CompensationAuthorized Positions:| 3,029,170Full-time permanent 12Other than full-time permanent 0ESA - | 53.30%EXHIBIT 12 – 15| 3,234,894PROGRAM CHANGE DETAIL BY OBJECT CLASS| 53.70%(Dollars in Thousands)| 3,418,722Budget Program: Bureau of Economic Analysis| 54.10%Sub-program: National Economic Accounts| 3,505,231Program Change: Big Data for Small Business| 54.30%FY 2016 FY 2016| 3,365,906Object Class Increase Total Program11| 54.0 Personnel compensation80%11.1 Full-time permanent 856 856| 3,455,52811| 55.3 Other than full-time permanent 0 020%11.5 Other personnel compensation 0 0| 11.8 Special personnel services payments 0 0| 11.9 Total personnel compensation 856 856|-12.0 Civilian personnel benefits 242 242| Nonlabor Components13.0 Benefits for former personnel 0 0| 2,414,41921| 54.0 Travel and transportation of persons 9 910%22.0 Transportation of things 0 0| 2,546,22923| 54.1 Rental payments to GSA 0 010%23.| 2 Rental Payments to others 0 0,607,16623| 53.3 Communications40%| 2,659, utilities and miscellaneous charges 7 797124| 54.0 Printing and reproduction 0 000%25.1 Advisory and assistance services 0 0| 2,605,17525| 53.2 Other services 58 5800%25.| 3 Purchases of goods & services from Gov't accounts 582 582,009,63025| 55.4 Operation and maintenance of facilities 0 060%25.5 Research and development contracts 0 0| 25.6 Medical care 0 0| 25.7 Operation and maintenance of equipment 0 0|}25.8 Subsistence and support of persons 0 026Source:https://www.0 Supplies and materials 39 3931sba.0 Equipment 125 12599gov/sites/default/files/rs390tot_1.0 Total obligations 1,918 1,918"pdf
Taken from pages 26-31 of [https://www.bea.gov/about/pdf/ESA_FY_2016_CJ_Final.pdf this] report.=='''Big Data for Small Business'''==
=='''Survey Respondents on Small Business Issues'''=={| class="wikitable sortable" style="widthPROGRAM CHANGE: 100%;"|-BIG DATA FOR SMALL BUSINESS ($1.9M / 9 FTE)! style="width: 5%;" | SurveySmall businesses are a critical element of the overall economy and are often at the leading edge of! style="width: 1%;" | Daterisk-taking, entrepreneurship, and economic growth. Yet, unlike large corporations who have staffs of! style="width: 20%;"| Labor Marketseconomists, advisors, and consultants to assist in interpreting and understanding the economy and! style="width: 20%;"| Capital guiding investments, small businesses largely depend on limited publicly-available data.! style="width: 20%;"| Sales Recognizing this, and the Department’s role in supporting small business growth and decision-making,! style="width: 25%;"| General Outlookas well as the need for more insight into the health of the small business sector, BEA proposes a new! style="width: 9%;" | Data suite of small business data products. To inform policy, as well as Main Street decision-making, BEA|-proposes to expand data on small business by developing a Small Business Satellite Account including| [http://www.nfib.com/assets/SBET-February-2016a new Small Business GDP to track the overall growth and health of America’s small business sector.pdf SBET February 2016] | February 2016| *42% This will be a key new measure, offering insight into the leading edge of businesses in the survey report few economy, as smallbusinesses are often the first to react to growth or contraction in their sectors or no qualified applicants for regions, often reactingto changes in policy before larger corporations. Gaining such insight will also fulfill a position that they were trying to fillkey lesson learned|from the 2008 financial crisis in terms of expanding the granularity of data on business activity.*4% of In addition to the new Small Business GDP measure, the small business owners surveyed reported that company borrowing needs were not met satellite account will present|*11% cite weak new data on the distribution of small businesses by size of employment and sales as their principal ; legal form ofbusiness problem|*Spending , taxes, and hiring plans fell as expectations for growth in real sales volumes declined|('''N=2194''', Data was obtained from membership files net income; by industry; and by region of the NFIB)country. This data will provide|-| [http://newsroom.bankofamerica.com/files/press_kit/additional/Small_Business_Owner_Report_-_Fall_2015.pdf Small Business Owner report]meaningful descriptions and the ability to understand trends over time regarding the changes in| composition, industry, and geography of the small business sector. In addition to supporting goodFall 2015|*67% planned public policy at the national level, these data will also be of substantial value to hire 12+ employees within 2015state and local|*46% of small businesses surveyed cite credit availability government as well as business development officials in understanding their primary concern regional economic|dynamics.*28% of businesses say they will use recently acquired funding to develop Coupled with BEA’s other products, such as GDP by State and Real State Personal Income, thesenew statistics will represent a wealth of new product or service within information to guide small business growth and policy.Beyond the next year|*56% say they expect public policy arena, expanding the US economy Department’s data offerings to improve within this essentialconstituency will only further enhance the next 12 monthsability of America’s entrepreneurs to innovate, grow, and lead*72% of small successful businesses expect their revenue .There are no risks to increase for the yeardevelopment and production of new data, and particularly not as it relates to a|('''N=1new satellite account focusing on small businesses. In this case,001''' small business owners inparticularly given that no new datathe US with annual revenue $100,000<x<$4ESA - 26EXHIBIT 12 – 15collection is proposed (the new account will be built from existing,999primarily administrative, data),999 and employingbetween 2<x<99 employees)|-| [https://wellsfargoworksthus no additional burden will be placed on businesses to develop the necessary data.com/File/Index/J6WCK2WHn0ydThe opportunities presented by this proposal are considerable given the well-wrTX8btvA WellsFargo survey]defined record of|January 2016|*26% accomplishment of small businesses expect to hire accurate, reliable, official statistical data providing the knowledge basis foreconomic growth as well as smart decisions in Q1 2016the public policy sector.*66% of businesses expect Further, the number benefit of jobs this initiative to stay the same*11% Department goes to the heart of businesses say that hiring and retaining qualified staff the Department’s role ineconomic policy – the Department is their most pressing problem|*19% the primary source of businesses responded that obtaining credit was difficult*5% actionable statistics on the state of say cash flow and financial stability as the company's biggest problem*4% economy. Along with the daily provision of weather information, the weekly issuance of businesses surveyed speculate credit availability may be prohibiting company growtheconomic|*14% experienced difficulty attracting customers in Q1 2016indicators is one of the Department’s most important and visible functions. Expanding the Department’s*38% of businesses surveyed stated data offerings to such an important constituency is a positive revenue increase in Q1 2016highly valuable proposition for both the|Department as well as policy and business sectors.*67% The risk of not pursuing this proposal is perpetuating the continued lack of direct knowledge of small businesses regard their financial situation as good or very good in Q1 2016*71% expect a positive financial future within the next 12 months *8% economic health of the small businesses say business sector and what that sector can tell us about the health of the overall economy . There is a clear need and desire for this information, as demonstrated by multipleefforts over the principal problem their business is facing |('''N=600''' small business owners in Q1 2016)years by SBA and various trade associations to develop similar data sets. BEA is|-|[http://wwwuniquely suited to develop this data set given its role as the custodian of the nation’s economicaccounts.vistage.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/WSJ-CEO-Survey-0116.pdf WSJ survey]Further, data on small businesses published by BEA will have the official imprimatur of BEA|January 2016|*54% of businesses surveyed said they expect firm size as well as the full, symmetric, and broad access to increase|*40% of businesses reported the data that they expect their firm's fixed investment expenditures to increase during the next 12 mois true for all BEA data products.|*73% report an expected sales increase within the year *54% Also of firms expect their profitability to improveimportance is that, as a BEA data set, the Small Business Satellite Account will provide data in|*Investments a consistent times series, as well as in new plant a format and equipment have fallen to their lowest level methodology consistent with all of BEA’s accountsthus allowing expanded analysis in more than two yearsfull context.*20% Given the role and importance of firms expect the economy to worsen small businesses in economic growth and recovery, the year ahead—the highest level in more than two years.addition of||new and better information to assist small business decision-making and investment will only serve to|[https://wwwsupport small business success.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/smallbusiness/SBCS-2014-ReportThis is an outstanding opportunity for the Department to expand itsservice offering to this critical constituency.pdf NY Fed Survey]|Costs are largely personnel in nature, with a $500k expected expenditure on data purchase.2014ESA - 27|EXHIBIT 12 – 15*27% of businesses reported an Targets without increase in their full time staff*15% reported a decrease in their full time staffFY2016*58% of respondents reported no change in their employee baseFY|2017*23% of businesses reported 10-25K of debtFY2018*62% of businesses had applied for <100K of financingFY*41% responded they'd sought financing from a large regional bank 2019|FY*35% of respondents reported increasing revenues and positive profitability2020*23% of businesses said they'd experienced difficulty in attracting customersScore on Customer SatisfactionSurvey|Greater*29% of businesses reported personal savings as their primary financing sourcethan 4.0*29% of businesses operated at a loss Greater*13% of respondents said the increasing costs of running their business was their principal concernthan 4.0| Greater10 states of coverage: Alabama, Connecticut,than 4.0Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, New Jersey,GreaterNew York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee with businesses <500than 4.0|Greater|}than 4.0Complete all Major Strategic=='''Small Business Data Sets'''==Plan milestones related to{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width: 100%;"improving the economic|-accounts! style="width: 10%;" | NameSuccessfully complete related milestonesTargets with increaseFY! style="width: 10%;" | Link2016! style="width: 45%;" | DescriptionFY! style="width: 35%;" | Data Summary2017FY2018FY2019FY2020Score on Customer Satisfaction|-Survey|Dynamic Small Business SearchGreater|http://dsbsthan 4.sba0Greaterthan 4.gov/dsbs/search/dsp_dsbs1Greaterthan 4.cfm1Greater|The Small Business Administration maintains the Dynamic Small Business Search (DSBS) databasethan 4. As a small business registers in the System for Award Management, there is an opportunity 1Greaterthan 4.1Complete all Major StrategicPlan milestones related to fill out improving the small business profile. The information provided populates DSBS. DSBS is another tool contracting officers use economicaccountsSuccessfully complete additional milestonesspecifically tied to identify potential small business contractors for upcoming contracting opportunities. Small businesses can also use DSBS to identify other small businesses for teaming initiative goalsStatement of Need and joint venturing.Economic Benefits||-|Office The additional economic statistics resulting from the implementation of Advocacy Newsthis proposal will provide policy|https://www.sba.gov/advocacy|The News Update File is an xml news update file to inform makers, the public about recent regulatory alertsAdministration, Advocacy small business statistics reports, Advocacy and the Department of Commerce with key information to assess theeconomic health and capacity of the small business research reports, and Advocacy regulatory comment letterssector to engage in economic activity.Small|-|State Licenses & Permits| |Identifies the specific licenses or permits businesses comprise a large portion of the business may need depending on sector in the U.S. and are often the type leading edgeof business, its location, economic growth and applicable government rules.contraction; yet no current Federal statistical programs exist to provide a|-|FDIC|https://www5complete picture of the small business sector.fdic.gov/qbp/index.asp|Private While some features of the sector loans to small businessesare measured in|-|World Bank varying ways, this proposal will pull them together into a concise picture, allowing policy makers and|http://www.doingbusiness.org|The World Bank’s Doing Business series, dating business leaders to 2001, is an annual compendium assess and international ranking of regulatory measures impacting anticipate small business, such as economic capacity and respond accordingly.Specific economic benefits of this investment:• As has been demonstrated repeatedly since the number introduction of days it takes to legally register a business. Different aspects appear each year.regular, consistent, publicsector|Doing Business offers economic data from 2003 in the 1930s, detailed and quality economic statistics contributesignificantly to the present. The data is presented in a variety overall stability of ways useful the economy, which itself contributes to researchers, policy makers, journalists and otherseconomic growth.|Specific cost savings:|-• While this proposal will not result in cost savings to BEA, it will result in significantly improved|Kauffman Foundation|http://wwweconomic statistics.kauffman.org/section.aspx?id=research_and_policy These improved and expanded statistics will provide the right information|Studies to develop policies and data on small affect business investments that will improve U.S. competitiveness and entrepreneurship|-create new jobs.|Warrington College of Business|https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/ipoESA -data/28|IPO dataEXHIBIT 12 – 15|Up Possible return on investment:• The return on investment to date information on IPO's including: Underpricingthe Bureau, tech stocksand the nation, ageis significant, price revisions, sales, underwriting, foreign, long run returns, VC-backed IPOs from late 1900s - 2015as this initiative will serve|-to fill notable existing gaps in official government statistics and will provide highly valuable new|Bureau of Labor Statisticsdetail on the small business sector, its composition, employment, and growth by region and|http://wwwindustry.bls.gov/bdm/|Highlights from Of great value to economic policy makers, this new data series produced by BLS Business Employment Dynamics (BED) program provide some insights on the contribution will also be of new and small businesses high value to the number business community, in particular small businesses. Major corporations have staffs of businesses economists, advisors, and jobs consultants assisting in interpreting and understanding the economyand guiding investments – small businesses do not.|Set of • Better statistics generated from the Quarterly Census of Employment allow policies to be more accurately calibrated and Wages programoptimized by permitting amore accurate assessment of their costs and benefits. These quarterly data series consist of gross job The potential gains and gross job losses statistics from 1992 forwardthis initiativewill certainly far exceed the relatively small cost.|-Schedule and Milestones:|Federal Procurement Data System|httpsFY16://www.fpds.gov/fpdsng_cms/indexResearch and develop methodology; conduct outreach to stakeholders to gain additionalinformation; and expand collaboration with other Federal agency stakeholders.php/en/reports|A Department level report that displays Small Business data for a specified date range by Funding/Contracting Agency.FY17: Publish methodology papers and develop initial estimates; present and secure endorsement of|This report displays the dollars, actions, methodology and percentages for small business contracts in FY 2016 initial estimates from BEA Advisory CommitteeFY18: Publish prototype satellite accountFY19: Publish official data seriesDeliverables:Papers, prototype data series and goes back all the way to FY 1981final official data series published on an annual basis.|ESA -29|PayNet small Business Lending IndexEXHIBIT 12 – 15PROGRAM CHANGE PERSONNEL DETAIL(Actual Dollars)|httpBudget Program://www.paynetonline.com/issuesBureau of Economic AnalysisSub-and-solutions/all-paynet-products/small-business-lending-index-sbli/program: National Economic AccountsProgram Change: Big Data for Small BusinessTitle Band Interval NumberAnnualSalary Total SalarySenior Economist V 1 1 152,087 152,087|PayNet specializes in loan data and has a database which includes information on more than 20 million loans and leases. For these indexesSenior Economist IV 1 2 128,575 257, PayNet uses the data from US companies which have less than $150Economist III 1 million in total outstanding loans.3 87,411 262,233|The Small Business Lending Index Economist II 1 4 64,633 258,532IT Specialist III 1 2 92,802 185,604Total 12 1,115,606Less Lapse (3) (278,902)Total Full-time permanent (SBLIFTE) measure the volume of small business loans issued over the past 30 days and are based on the most recent data from the largest commercial and industrial lenders in PayNet's U9 836,7042015 Pay Adjustment (1.S. database0%) 8, including both loans and leases. 367|-|Paychex2016 Pay Adjustment (1.3%) 10,986Total 856,057Personnel Data|httpFull-time Equivalent Employment://www.paychex.com/jobsFull-index/index.aspxtime permanent 9|Paychex tracks changes in the employment levels of 350K small businesses with <50 employees Other than full-time permanent 0|The data for the jobs index comes from a subset of the Paychex client base, approximately 350,000 businesses with less than 50 workers in the U.S Total 9|Authorized Positions:Full-time permanent 12|ADP small business reportOther than full-time permanent 0|http://www.adpemploymentreport.com/2015/March/SBS/SBSESA -NER-March-2015.aspx30EXHIBIT 12 – 15PROGRAM CHANGE DETAIL BY OBJECT CLASS|The ADP Small Business Report provides the number of jobs created or lost by company size (1-19 employees, 20-49) and sector (goods or servicesDollars in Thousands). A seperate report details job gains and losses for national franchises.|The ADP National Employment Report® is published monthly by the ADP Research Institute® in close collaboration with Moody’s Analytics and its experienced team Budget Program: Bureau of labor market researchers. The ADP Economic AnalysisSub-program: National Employment Report provides a monthly snapshot of U.S. nonfarm private sector employment based on actual transactional payroll data.Economic AccountsProgram Change: Big Data for Small Business|-FY 2016 FY 2016|Intuit Small Business IndexObject Class Increase Total Program|http://www11.intuit0 Personnel compensation11.com/company/press1 Full-time permanent 856 85611.3 Other than full-room/press-releases/2015/Small-Business-Employment-Remained-Stagnant-in-October1/time permanent 0 0|The index measures 11.5 Other personnel compensation, hours worked, and revenue 0 011.8 Special personnel services payments 0 011.9 Total personnel compensation 856 85612.0 Civilian personnel benefits 242 24213.0 Benefits for companies with <20 employeesformer personnel 0 0|The Employment Index is based on anonymized, non-identifiable aggregated data from 271,750 small business employers21.0 Travel and transportation of persons 9 922.0 Transportation of things 0 023.1 Rental payments to GSA 0 023.2 Rental Payments to others 0 023.3 Communications, a subset of users of Intuit Online Payroll utilities and QuickBooks Onlinemiscellaneous charges 7 724. The Revenue Index is based on anonymized, non-identifiable aggregated data from 240,000 small businesses, a subset of users of Intuit’s QuickBooks Online with industry identification from Dun & Bradstreet0 Printing and reproduction 0 025.1 Advisory and assistance services 0 0|-25.2 Other services 58 58|Statistic Brain|http://www25.statisticbrain3 Purchases of goods & services from Gov't accounts 582 58225.com/startup-failure-by-industry/4 Operation and maintenance of facilities 0 0|Startup Business Failure rates by industry25.5 Research and development contracts 0 0|25.6 Medical care 0 0|-25.7 Operation and maintenance of equipment 0 0|The National Venture Capital Association Yearbook25.8 Subsistence and support of persons 0 0|http://nvca26.org/research/stats-studies/0 Supplies and materials 39 3931.0 Equipment 125 12599.0 Total obligations 1,918 1,918"|Details the state of the venture capital market in a given year|Primary data sources included:SEC filings that are regularly monitored by Thomson Reuters’ research staff, Surveys Taken from pages 26-31 of the industry routinely conducted by Thomson Reuters, and Verified industry press and press releases from venture firms. |-|NFIB Small Business Report|http[https://www.nfibbea.comgov/surveysabout/small-business-economic-trendspdf/ESA_FY_2016_CJ_Final.pdf this] report. |Measures economic trends in small businesses|The NFIB Research Foundation has collected ==U.S. innovation data (Small Business Economic Trends data with quarterly surveys since the 4th quarter of 1973 and monthly surveys since 1986Focused)== Example SBA Advocacy Report on Small Business Invention*https://www. Survey respondents are drawn from NFIB’s membershipsba. The report is released on the second Tuesday of each month. This survey was conducted in March 2016gov/sites/default/files/rs411tot. pdf|-|Medical Expenditure Panel SurveyUS R&D Funding data|http*https://mepswww.ahrqaaas.govorg/mepswebpage/|A set of largehistorical-trends-scale surveys federal-rd WIPO List of families and individuals, their medical providers, and employers across the United StatesInnovation Databases*http://www.wipo. MEPS is the most complete source of data on the cost and use of health care and health insurance coverageint/econ_stat/en/economics/research/ |The Household Component SBIR data are based on questionnaires fielded to individual household members and their medical providers*https://www.sbir. The Insurance Component estimates come from a survey of employers conducted to collect health insurance plan informationgov/awards/annual-reports|-|SBA LendersFederal funding for R&D|*https://www.sbansf.gov/lendersstatistics/srvyfedfunds/#tabs-top-1002|SBA lending data|Table displaying the 100 most active SBA 7a lenders in the US by lending volume in FY 2016 through Q2Data check: U.S. government share of basic research funding falls below 50%|-|Kaiser Family Foundation|*http://kffwww.sciencemag.org/health-costsnews/2017/report03/2015data-employercheck-healthus-government-benefitsshare-survey/|Annual Survey of employers providing a detailed look at trends in employerbasic-sponsored health coverage |The 2015 survey included almost 2,000 interviews with nonresearch-federal public and private firms.|funding-falls-below-50 OECD R&D spending data by country|Federal Reserve|http*https://wwwdata.federalreserveoecd.govorg/communitydevrd/smallgross-domestic-spending-businesseson-datar-analysisd.htm|Many Reserve Banks monitor trends and credit market conditions for small and new businessesPISA*https://data.oecd.org/pisa/science-performance-pisa. The polling efforts of the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Atlanta are two examples of System work to better understand small business trendshtm | The SBCS captures the perspectives of businesses with fewer than 500 employees in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and PennsylvaniaBRDIS*https://www. There were 835 responses to the survey fielded from April 3, 2014 to June 20, 2014nsf. The Atlanta Fed conducted the first-quarter 2014 survey during the first four weeks of April. The survey was completed by 562 respondentsgov/statistics/srvyindustry/about/brdis/|-|Entrepeneur.com report|*https://www.entrepreneurnsf.comgov/statistics/infbrief/pagensf11300/216022|Comprehensive statistics on small business trends in the United States for various years|-|United States Census Bureau|https:*https://www.censusnsf.gov/econstatistics/sbosrvyindustry/getdataabout/brdis/panel.htmlcfm|Statistics for Owner's of Small businesses in 2012|1.75 million businesses were selected for the survey. Survey included are all nonfarm businesses filing Internal Revenue Service tax forms as individual proprietorshipsGlobal Innovation Index 2017: Switzerland, Sweden, partnershipsNetherlands, or any type of corporationUSA, and with receipts of $1,000 or more.UK Top Annual Ranking|-|Small Business Dashboard|*http://smallbusinesswww.datawipo.govint/pressroom/en/articles/2017/article_0006.html|Information on small business contracting activities|ncludes procurement contract transactions reported directly through the contract writing systems of approximately 65 U*https://www.Sglobalinnovationindex. Government, Executive Branch, departments, bureaus, agencies, and commissionsorg/Data spans contract transactions from FY 2000 onwardsSmallBusinessDashboard.gov is updated with FPDS-NG data on a daily basisThe 16 most innovative countries in the world|-|411 Small Business Facts|*http://www.411sbfactsbusinessinsider.com/|Sortable database of over 60 separate small business surveys|411SmallBusinessFacts.com is most-innovative-countries-in-the-world-2017-6/#3-netherlands-with-a searchable data base -high-volume-of approximately 2,000 facts about American small businesses and their owners (or managers) produced by -patents-filed-the-netherlands-leads-the NFIB Research Foundation. The Foundation developed this information from telephone -surveys of small employers – those employing from one person in addition to -business-sophistication-rankings-the owner(s) to 250. Data collection began -country-also-falls-near-the-top-in 2001 and continues through -the present. |-|Survey categories-of Minority Owned Businesses|http://-knowledge-and-technology-outputs-which-include-things-like-inventions-and-trademarks-14 IMD World Competitiveness Center*http://www.mbdaimd.govorg/siteswcc/default/filesworld-competitiveness-center/2012SBO_MBEFactSheet020216.pdf|Data set attempting to give a comprehensive outlook to the state of minority business enterprises in the US|Minority owned business fact sheet created in January 2016|-|NASE|*http://www.naseimd.org/|A trade association that provides dayglobalassets/wcc/docs/release-2017/wcy-to2017-day support for microvs-businesses, including direct access to experts, benefits, and consolidated buying power that is traditionally only available to large corporations. The association is the largest nonprofit, nonpartisan association of its kind in the United States2016---final.pdf|Presents statistics and facts GEM data on self employed members of the US economy from the 1990's to the late 2000s|-|Federal Reserve board|https*http://www.federalreservegemconsortium.govorg/pubscountry-profile/oss/oss3/nssbftoc.htm122|Federal reserve board survey of small business finances|Balance sheets of the firm are some examples of the types of information collected. Working papers and methodology reports, codebooks and other related documentation, and the full public data sets are available here for the 2003, 1998, 1993, and 1987 SSBFs|NBER Historical Cross-Country Technology Adoption (HCCTA) Dataset||}[[Category*http: Internal]][[Internal Classification: Legacy| ]]//www.nber.org/hccta/

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