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Cash, Credit, and the Bookkeeping Gap: What We're Learning About Small Firms' Financial Lives
About a third of the small firms in our study have three months of expenses in the bank. About one in ten could last only a week. Most have access to credit, and when they ask for more, they usually get it. Yet two-thirds say they'll rely mainly on savings, not credit, to fund their next investment. Why? And why can the same set of bookkeeping records lead one lender to offer a loan and another to turn it down? Earlier this month, the Financial Access Initiative presented pre
Tracy Cole
1 day ago


Expectations vs. Reality: How Does Running a Small Firm Stack Up Against Owners’ Aspirations?
A few weekends ago, while waiting at a crosswalk in New York City, I overheard a conversation between what appeared to be two small business owners. The part I caught was something we hear all too often from small business owners in the U.S.: the long hours they devote to their businesses each week, weekends included, and their shared desire to “just have a break.” Part of what fills those hours is the range of roles an owner personally covers: operator, strategist, bookkee
Tracy Cole
Jul 6


Identifying idiosyncrasies in small firm data: Understanding what’s behind the data driving small firm policy
When trying to better understand small firms, some of the most important questions center on employment and jobs: How many jobs do small firms create? What is the quality of those jobs - particularly in terms of stability and security? Much of what we know about small firms comes from federal data, but like any data source, there are very real constraints that inhibit the insight provided by the available data.
Tracy Cole
Jan 7
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