"As business owners, women in 2007 had a major impact on the nation's economy, employing more than 7.6 million workers,” said Census Bureau Deputy Director Thomas Mesenbourg. “In addition, the businesses they owned equally with men added another 8.1 million workers. Furthermore, businesses where women were owners or half-owners numbered 12.4 million firms, representing 45.7 percent of all firms."
The percentage of women-owned businesses was fairly constant from state to state. In every state, women owned at least a fifth of the businesses and the percentage exceeded 30 percent in several states.
In some industries, women controlled a significant share of the businesses. For example, women-owned businesses accounted for 52.0 percent of all businesses operating in the health care and social assistance sector.
Nearly half of all women-owned businesses (45.9 percent) operated in repair and maintenance; personal and laundry services; health care and social assistance; and professional, scientific and technical services.
"Nonetheless, women-owned businesses still lag behind businesses owned by men,” Mesenbourg said. In 2007, businesses owned by men numbered 13.9 million (accounting for 51.3 percent of all businesses) and generated $8.5 trillion in receipts (28.2 percent of all receipts).
The three states with the largest number of women-owned businesses in 2007 were California, Texas and New York. California had 1.0 million women-owned businesses, or 13.3 percent of all women-owned businesses in the United States. Texas had 610,162 women-owned businesses, or 7.8 percent of all women-owned businesses in the United States, and New York had 594,421 women-owned businesses, or 7.6 percent.
The three counties with the largest number of women-owned businesses in 2007 were Los Angeles County, Calif. (316,583); Cook County, Ill., (165,272); and Miami-Dade County, Fla., (116,533). The three cities with the largest number of women-owned businesses in 2007 were New York (305,145), Los Angeles (136,626) and Chicago (92,132).
The three metropolitan statistical areas with the largest number of women-owned businesses were New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island (604,647); Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana (409,872); and Chicago-Naperville-Joliet (271,068).
Of the 7.8 million women-owned businesses in 2007, 88.3 percent (6.9 million businesses) had no paid employees. These women-owned nonemployer businesses generated $182.3 billion in receipts (15.3 percent of all women-owned business receipts).
There were 7,644 women-owned businesses employing 100 or more people, 0.8 percent of all women-owned employer businesses. These businesses generated $357.9 billion in receipts (35.5 percent of all women-owned employer business receipts).
The Survey of Business Owners defines women-owned businesses as firms in which women own 51 percent or more of the equity, interest, or stock of the business. Additional reports from the survey highlighting minority- and veteran-owned businesses will be issued over the next year. The Survey of Business Owners is conducted every five years as part of the quinquennial economic census. The 2007 survey collected data from a sample of more than 2.3 million businesses. Data collected in a sample survey are subject to sampling variability, as well as nonsampling errors. Sources of nonsampling errors include errors of response, nonreporting and coverage. More details concerning the SBO survey design, methodology and data limitations can be found at <http://www.census.gov/econ/sbo/methodology.html>.
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