Entrepreneurship and Labor Absorption: Blacks and Whites in Northern U.S. Cities During the Great Depression

An extensive literature on newly developing societies shows that the urban economy's entrepreneurial sector can absorb a sizable share of persons who are unemployed and searching for work. Surprisingly, however, little research on the United States has examined entrepreneurship's labor abs...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Review of Black political economy 2022-12, Vol.49 (4), p.403-422
1. Verfasser: Boyd, Robert L.
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description An extensive literature on newly developing societies shows that the urban economy's entrepreneurial sector can absorb a sizable share of persons who are unemployed and searching for work. Surprisingly, however, little research on the United States has examined entrepreneurship's labor absorption capacity. The present study fills this gap by analyzing Blacks and Whites in northern U.S. cities during the Great Depression, a time of widespread joblessness, particularly among Blacks. The results suggest that, if not for Blacks’ uniquely severe resource deprivation, Black entrepreneurship could have absorbed a large number of jobless Blacks. Labor absorption estimates, calculated with 1940 Census data, indicate that one-third of the Black-White unemployment difference is attributable to racial inequality of entrepreneurial outcomes. This historical evidence advances social-scientific understanding of racial inequality during the Great Depression and informs a longstanding debate about the merits of promoting Black business ownership as a strategy for improving Blacks’ labor market prospects.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Absorption
Black owned businesses
Black people
Censuses
Deprivation
Developing countries
Economic depression
Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurship
Great Depression
Labor market
LDCs
Mental depression
Ownership
Prospects
Racial inequality
Racism
Unemployed people
Unemployment
White people
title Entrepreneurship and Labor Absorption: Blacks and Whites in Northern U.S. Cities During the Great Depression
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