and operating on a scale large enough to produce most efficiently all of the goods demanded by an increasingly
sophisticated and affluent population. In this environment, the modern corporation, often employing hundreds or
even thousands of workers, assumed increased importance. Today, the American economy boasts a wide array of
enterprises, ranging from one-person sole proprietorships to some of the world's largest corporations. In 1995,
there were 16.4 million non-farm, sole proprietorships, 1.6 million partnerships, and 4.5 million corporations in
the United States -- a total of 22.5 million independent enterprises.
Small Business Many visitors from abroad are surprised to learn that even today, the U.S. economy is by no means
dominated by giant corporations. Fully 99 percent of all independent enterprises in the country employ fewer than
500 people. These small enterprises account for 52 percent of all U.S. workers, according to the U.S. Small
Business Administration (SBA). Some 19.6 million Americans work for companies employing fewer than 20 workers, 18.4
million work for firms employing between 20 and 99 workers, and 14.6 million work for firms with 100 to 499
workers. By contrast, 47.7 million Americans work for firms with 500 or more employees. Small businesses are a
continuing source of dynamism for the American economy. They produced three-fourths of the economy's new jobs
between 1990 and 1995, an even larger contribution to employment growth than they made in the 1980s. They also
represent an entry point into the economy for new groups. Women, for instance, participate heavily in small
businesses. The number of female-owned businesses climbed by 89 percent, to an estimated 8.1 million, between 1987
and 1997, and women-owned sole proprietorships were expected to reach 35 percent of all such ventures by the year
2000. Small firms 41
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