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Mary Frauenfelder
301-763-7318

          Almost Half of All U.S. Small Businesses Home-Based,
                         Census Bureau Reports

     Nearly half of the 17 million small businesses in the United States were 
home-based, according to a new report released today by the Commerce 
Department's Census Bureau. 

     "Only 2 percent of these home-based businesses had $250,000 or more in 
receipts while 74 percent brought in less than $25,000," said Mary 
Frauenfelder, author of the report, 1992 Characteristics of Business Owners, 
CBO92-1.  "Most small business owners worked less than 40 hours a week and 
their businesses were not their primary source of income," she said.

     More than 14 million of the 17 million small businesses in the United 
States (82 percent) were owner-operated and had no paid employees. 

     Other highlights from the 1992 report include: 

   -	Most owners had prior work experience. More than half of the small
	business owners had 10 or more years of work experience before
	starting or acquiring their businesses, and half had a close
	relative who was a business owner. 

   -	Many owners were college educated. Thirty-five percent of the owners
	had at least a bachelor's degree and 42 percent of the owners of
	service businesses had bachelor's and/or professional degrees. 
                                
   -	Capital commitments were modest. Fifty-seven percent of the owners
	started or acquired their businesses with less than $5,000 in
	capital and 25 percent required no capital. Only 19 percent used
	capital based on a personal loan. 

   -	Minority firms draw minority customers. Forty-four percent of African
     	American-owned businesses reported that more than half their
	customers were minorities; Hispanic-owned firms reported 33
	percent; Asian and Pacific Islander, American Indian, and Alaska
	Native firms, 26 percent; and nonminority male firms, 9 percent. 

   -	Women-owned businesses hire proportionately more women. Thirty-five
	percent of women-owned employer firms reported 75 percent or more
	of their work force was female, compared to less than 24 percent
	of the nonminority male-owned firms.

     The full report and tabulations show owner and business characteristics by 
race, ethnicity, gender, kind of business and legal form of organization for 
individual proprietorships, partnerships and subchapter S corporations (a 
subchapter S corporation is a special Internal Revenue Service designation for 
legally incorporated businesses with 35 or fewer shareholders who, because of 
tax advantages, elect to be taxed as individual shareholders rather than as 
corporations).

     The data in this report are subject to sampling variability, as well as
nonsampling errors.  Sources of nonsampling error include errors of response, 
nonreporting and coverage.  Measures of sampling variability, presented as 
relative standard errors, are shown in the publication tables. 

     The Internet address is  http://www.census.gov/csd/cbo/. 

     To obtain a paper copy of the report, call the Public Information Office
on 301-457-3030. 
-X-
The Census Bureau pre-eminent collector and provider of timely, relevant and 
quality data about the people and economy of the United States.  In more than 
100 surveys annually and 20 censuses a decade, evolving from the first census 
in 1790, the Census Bureau provides official information about America's 
people, businesses, industries and institutions. 


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: April 11, 2001 at 08:40:07 AM

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