Is Declining Business Failure Holding Back BIZ Experiencesship? Data suggest the lower rate of companies failing might be behind the decline in companies starting up.

By Scott Shane Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

You've seen this happen many times. Once soaring businesses hit hard times and are faced with the prospect of shutting down. Elected officials, concerned about worker layoffs, extend the businesses cheap credit, buy their products, or otherwise subsidize the companies, to keep them afloat.

It sounds like a humane economic policy. But is it really a good idea?

Many economists believe that business dynamism – the birth and death of firms – is crucial to productivity and economic growth in capitalist economies. As University of Maryland economist John Haltiwanger writes, "[T]he churning process replaces lower productivity businesses with new, more productive ones, thereby increasing productivity in the economy as a whole."

Ian Hathaway of Ennsyte Economics and Bob Litan of the Brookings Institution have found that the U.S. economy has become less dynamic in the past three-and-a-half decades, with the new business fraction of companies falling from approximately 15.1 percent of American employers in 1977 to 8.1 percent in 2012. Intervention by paternalistic policymakers seeking to dampen the harsh effects of capitalism and prevent existing businesses from going under, may be responsible for the decline, at least in part.

Rates of business formation and failure are linked. When existing companies go under, they create opportunities for BIZ Experiencess to start new businesses to meet demand in the newly underserved markets. Moreover, when businesses shut down, they free up capital and labor for new businesses to employ without requiring the new guys to pay a premium to bid those resources away from more established players.

A look at U.S. Census data provides support for the hypothesis that depressed business failure rates are responsible for the decline in business start-up rates. Between 1977 and 2012, the per capita number of new employers founded annually in the United States correlates 0.56 with the fraction of existing employers that went under in the year. While that's far from a perfect statistical association – a correlation of 1.00 means that two numbers move in perfect concert – it's enough to suggest that the two numbers are related. In years where more American businesses went under, more American companies tended to get started, while in years where fewer American businesses shut down, fewer American companies tended to be formed.

Related: Finding a Good Small Business Job is Getting Harder

A cross-national comparison of business formation and discontinuation rates provides further support for this argument. Across 69 countries examined in the 2014 Global BIZ Experiencesship Monitor, an annual survey of BIZ Experiencesial activity across the globe, the total BIZ Experiencesship activity rate – the fraction of a nation's adult age population that is either starting a business or is the owner-manager of a new business – correlates 0.81 with the country's discontinuation rate – the fraction of the adult-age population that has shut down a business. As the figure below shows, countries that have a high rate of business failure also tend to have a high rate of business formation, while countries that have with a low rate of business discontinuation also tend to have a low rate of start-up activity. No countries have both high start-up and low discontinuation rates.

Image credit: Created from data from the Global BIZ Experiencesship Monitor

The patterns described here are only correlations. Nothing in the Census or GEM data indicate that higher business failure rates cause start-up rates to rise. Nevertheless, the correlation between the two suggest that they are linked.

Because our nation's declining start-up rate has many observers worried, our elected officials should take a careful look at whether the policies they have undertaken in recent years to minimize business failure have inadvertently suppressed BIZ Experiencesial activity.

Related: How to Pick Equity Crowdfunding Investments

Scott Shane

Professor at Case Western Reserve University

Scott Shane is the A. Malachi Mixon III professor of BIZ Experiencesial studies at Case Western Reserve University. His books include Illusions of BIZ Experiencesship: The Costly Myths That BIZ Experiencess, Investors, and Policy Makers Live by (Yale University Press, 2008) and Finding Fertile Ground: Identifying Extraordinary Opportunities for New Businesses (Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005).

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Science & Technology

Stop Using ChatGPT Like an Amateur — Turn It Into a $100K Business Strategist

I used one ChatGPT prompt to uncover exactly why my funnel wasn't converting — and how to fix it.

Starting a Business

Why Retirees Have a Hidden Edge as BIZ Experiencess

Retirement is no longer the endgame — it's the BIZ Experiencesial green light.

Data & Recovery

They May Look Mundane, But They Distract Employees, Compromise Security, and Slow Your Internet

How more business owners have started using this $15 ad blocker to protect themselves.

Growing a Business

How the Next Generation of BIZ Experiencess Is Outpacing Us — and Why

Today's founders are flipping the script and redefining how startups are built.