Time-series analyses generally show rates of business formation increasing with unemployment. In cross-section studies the areas with the highest rates of formation are generally those with the lowest levels of unemployment. In a study using both types of data, the negative cross-section relationship is confirmed but it is suggested that the time-series may be nonlinear, becoming negative at a critical unemployment level around 20%. The paper concludes with a reconciliation of these findings.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
CreedyJJohnsonP S, 1983, “Firm formation in manufacturing industry”Applied Economics15177–185
2.
Department of Employment, 1971British Labour Statistics: Historical Abstract 1886 –1968 (HMSO, London)
3.
GangulyP, 1985UK Small Business Statistics and International Comparisons Ed. BannockG (Harper and Row, London)
4.
GudginGFothergillS, 1984, “Geographic variation in the rate of formation of new manufacturing firms”Regional Studies13203–206
5.
HamiltonR T, 1986, “The influence of unemployment on the level and rate of company formation in Scotland, 1950–1984”Environment and Planning A181401–1404
6.
HarrisonR THartM, 1983, “Factors influencing new-business formation: a case study of Northern Ireland”Environment and Planning A151395–1412
7.
JohnsonP SDarnellA, 1976, “New firm formation in Great Britain”, WP-5, Department of Economics, University of Durham, Durham DH1 3HP
8.
KmentaJ, 1971Elements of Econometrics (Macmillan, New York)
9.
NunnS, 1980, “The opening and closure of manufacturing establishments in the UK, 1966 – 1975”, WP36, Regional Series No.1, Department of Trade and Industry, 1 – 19 Victoria Street, London SW1
10.
OxenfeldtA R, 1943New Firms and Free Enterprise (American Council on Public Affairs, Washington, DC)
11.
StoreyD J, 1982Entrepreneurship and the New Firm (Croom Helm, Beckenham, Kent)
12.
StoreyD JJohnsonS, 1987, “Regional variations in entrepreneurship in the UK”Scottish Journal of Political Economy34161–173
13.
WhittingtonR C, 1984, “Regional bias in new firm formation in the UK”Regional Studies18253–256