U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of 
Commerce News
                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                   TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2002

Patricia Buscher                                    CB02-138
Public Information Office                                                                   
(301) 763-3030/457-3670 (fax)
(301 ) 457-1037 (TDD)                               Detailed tables
e-mail: pio@census.gov                              Quotes & radio sound bites
               

                  'Mom-and-Pop' Shops Increase

  Businesses with no paid employees grew 2.3 percent between 1999 and 2000
from 16.2 million to 16.5 million, according to the Commerce Department's
Census Bureau.

  Nevada led all states in the growth of its nonemployer businesses, with
an increase of 6.9 percent. Maryland was second, at 5.0 percent; followed
by Delaware, at 4.9 percent.

  "These very small businesses make up 70 percent of all businesses," said
Census Bureau analyst Jerry Roth. "They may be run by one or more
individuals, can range from home-based businesses to mom-and-pop stores to
construction contractors and often are part-time ventures with individual
owners operating more than one of them."
 
  Examples of these types of businesses are barber and beauty shops,
child-care providers, real estate agents, carpenters, plumbers, writers
and tax preparers.

  The report, Nonemployer Statistics: 2000 [PDF 1M], provides a portion of 
the detailed Internet tables, which show the number of establishments and
their receipts for the United States, states, counties and metropolitan
areas for nearly 300 different industries.

  Four economic sectors accounted for almost 60 percent of nonemployer
receipts real estate and rental and leasing ($133 billion); construction
($108 billion); professional, scientific and technical services ($90
billion); and retail trade ($74 billion).

  The following table shows increases between 1999 and 2000 in the number
and percentage of nonemployer businesses for the United States and the
five leading states:
  Total Nonemployer Businesses       Increases 1999 - 2000
State 1999 2000 Number Percent
United States 16,152,604 16,529,955 377,351 2.3
Nevada 106,416 113,744 7,328 6.9
Maryland 307,535 322,819 15,284 5.0
Delaware 39,181 41,082 1,901 4.9
Florida 1,031,053 1,074,020 42,967 4.2
Michigan 506,038 526,958 20,920 4.1
 The next table shows gains in annual receipts between 1999 and 2000 by
nonemployer businesses in the United States and the five states with the
largest percentage increases:
  Nonemployer Receipts        Gains in Receipts 1999 - 2000
State 1999 ($bil.) 2000 ($bil.) Amount ($bil.) Percent
United States $667.2 $709.4 $42.2 6.3
Nevada 5.2 5.9 0.7 13.9
Maryland 11.5 12.8 1.4 11.9
Vermont 1.6 1.8 0.2 10.9
Rhode Island 2.3 2.5 0.2 10.2
Pennsylvania 24.7 27.0 2.4 9.7
  The report also has data on 14.4 million individual proprietorships,
more than 1 million corporations and almost 1 million partnerships.
Nonemployer firms do not cover all self-employed business owners, since
many of these have paid employees.

  The data are subject to nonsampling error such as errors of
self-classification by industry on tax forms, as well as errors of
response, nonreporting and coverage. Further information about methodology
and data limitations are available in the report.

                               -X-


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

Last Revised: October 23, 2002 at 09:20:11 AM

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