Difference between revisions of "Fairlie Robb (2007) - Why Are Black Owned Businesses Less Successful Than White Owned Businesses"

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(New page: *This page is referenced in The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page ==Reference(s)== *Fairlie, ...)
 
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*This page is referenced in [[Entrepreneurship_Research_Boot_Camp#The_Decision_to_become_an_Entrepreneur | The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page]]
 
*This page is referenced in [[Entrepreneurship_Research_Boot_Camp#The_Decision_to_become_an_Entrepreneur | The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page]]
  

Revision as of 12:47, 29 September 2020

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Reference(s)

  • Fairlie, Robert and Alicia Robb (2007), "Why Are Black-Owned Businesses Less Successful than White-Owned Businesses? The Role of Families, Inheritances, and Business Human Capital", Journal of Labor Economics, 25(2), pp. 289-323 pdf

Abstract

Using confidential microdata from the Characteristics of Business Owners survey, we examine why African American-owned businesses lag substantially behind white-owned businesses in sales, profits, employment, and survival. Black business owners are much less likely than white owners to have had a self-employed family member owner prior to starting their business and less likely to have worked in that family member’s business. Using a nonlinear decomposition technique, we find that the lack of prior work experience in a family business among black business owners, perhaps by limiting their acquisition of general and specific business human capital, negatively affects black business outcomes.