Hiring opportunities for new firms and the business cycle
Version
Published
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
Brixy, Udo
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Whether firms founded during or outside economic crises have greater growth potential is an important question for both prospective entrepreneurs and policy makers. Existing research offers conflicting answers, and mostly either focuses on aggregate cohort-level effects or selectively excludes small new firms from the analyses. Using extensive linked employer-employee data on young German firms around and during the Global Financial Crisis, a period of sharply reduced access to external capital and recession, we show that young firms respond to cyclical conditions in highly heterogeneous ways. Our firm-level results reveal that the average new firm found it easier to hire its first employees when it was founded during the crisis. These firms achieved countercyclical growth by hiring career entrants. More specifically, hiring in very young (<1.5 years) and small to medium-sized (below the 90th percentile) young firms was countercyclical, while this was not the case for older and larger young firms. Thus, the firm-specific effects for young entrepreneurial firms may be very different from those reported in previous research. Our results suggest that market entry during a crisis may facilitate hiring and that policies that promote entrepreneurship may usefully complement policies that encourage labor hoarding by incumbents during recessions.
Publisher DOI
Journal
Small Business Economics
ISSN
0921-898X
Organization
Publisher
Springer New York LLC
Submitter
Murmann, Martin
Citation apa
Brixy, U., & Murmann, M. (2024). Hiring opportunities for new firms and the business cycle. In Small Business Economics. Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.24451/dspace/11250
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