Slow business start-ups and the job recovery
Start-ups typically create jobs so fast at the beginning of recoveries that even a modest drop in that pace can affect the whole economy. In fact, slower job growth among new businesses may have resulted in 760,000 fewer jobs in the first year of the current recovery. Because housing wealth is an important factor in the financing of new businesses, lower house prices may have been partly to blame for the slower growth. Conversely, recently increasing house prices may already be boosting start-up growth and, with it, overall job growth.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Laderman, Elizabeth S. ; Leduc, Sylvain |
Published in: |
FRBSF Economic Letter. - Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. - 2014, 20
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Publisher: |
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
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