Regina Leader-Post

More Canucks striking out on own

- JULIAN BELTRAME THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Canada is increasing­ly becoming a country of small entreprene­urs, according to a new report from CIBC pointing to a sharp rise in the number of Canadians starting their own businesses.

The report finds that in June more than half a million Canadians said they had begun their own business over the past two years, a record number.

Perhaps most encouragin­g, 80 per cent of new owners say they made the decision to strike out on their own voluntaril­y, not because they couldn’t find a job.

That’s a welcome shift from the early 1990s and 2008, when the recession and layoffs drove more and more Canadians into involuntar­y self-employment.

Currently, about 15 per cent of Canada’s labour force is self-employed. But the CIBC study, which drew its data from research commission­ed from Statistics Canada, suggests the proportion will rise in the future.

Economist Benjamin Tal, who authored the paper released Tuesday, said several factors appear to be driving the trend.

Those factors include the aging population — the over-50 crowd represents 30 per cent of all the new startups — technology like the Internet that makes the process easier, outsourcin­g by corporatio­ns to small firms and the continued influx of immigrants, who represent a sizable section of the self-starters.

“I would say these trends are irreversib­le,” he said. “The trend suggests the growth in self-employment will be faster in the next decade than any other decade.”

Tal said older Canadians are more likely to start their own firms because they tend to have the work experience necessary, have made useful contacts during the work lives and are more likely to have the financial means to do so.

He ventured another reason why the trend may accelerate: “Add to that a new generation of Canadians that are much more cynical about corporate culture, about pensions, and are more selfrelian­t,” he said.

The new entreprene­urs also tend to be predominan­tly male, accounting for almost 70 per cent of all startups, although female-led startups tend to stay in business longer on average.

By sectors, the number of individual­s starting businesses in the educationa­l services field has risen by 65 per cent since 2007, the fastest growth of any, followed by a 20 per cent increase in health care. Proportion­ally, British Columbia leads the country with startups representi­ng 3.9 per cent of the employed population.

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