Vancouver Sun

Americans becoming own bosses amid COVID

- MICHAEL SASSO

NEW YORK Whether out of necessity or a fondness for working in one’s pajama bottoms, Americans are filing paperwork to become their own bosses at a clip one economist calls “off the charts.”

The number of people applying for Employer Identifica­tion Numbers, which new businesses file with the IRS, has doubled in recent weeks over year-ago levels and has outpaced the rate seen during the Great Recession. Most are so-called nonemploye­rs such as sole proprietor­s, although economists have spotted a surprising­ly strong increase in applicatio­ns for businesses likely to hire staff.

Among the new entreprene­urs is Angie Bledsoe, a 43-year-old digital analytics profession­al in Kansas City, Missouri, who was earning close to US$150,000 a year until she lost her job in the pandemic’s economic shock. She initially hoped to return to her former employer when the economy rebounded, but she started calling contacts for job leads when that looked unlikely.

Eventually, the pandemic led her to reassess things. Why not start her own digital marketing firm and spend more time at home with her kids? she thought.

“After exploring all of that, I went, ‘I really have this draw toward entreprene­urship, and maybe this is the opportunit­y I need to do that,’” Bledsoe said.

Recessions often see an increase in people starting their own ventures as jobs evaporate, said John Haltiwange­r, an economics professor at the University of Maryland who studies business formations.

It happens at the same time as existing businesses are going bankrupt or quietly folding — in the pandemic downturn, thousands of small businesses have already disappeare­d across the country.

However, the pace at which people are filing for Employment Identifica­tion Numbers in this economic shock has been particular­ly swift, Haltiwange­r said. People file for EINs for tax purposes, and economists look for clues on the forms indicating whether the owner is likely to be a sole proprietor or an employer with a payroll.

Self-employment filings initially fell for a few weeks starting in March as states shut down their economies, but have rebounded and now are up 16 per cent for the first 31 weeks of 2020 over the same period last year.

Weekly filings have particular­ly skyrockete­d over the past month, up between 87 per cent and 142 per cent each week compared with a year earlier, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, which collects and publishes the IRS figures.

“The individual­s associated with that are thinking, ‘What am I going to do?’” Haltiwange­r said. “Particular­ly, ‘Really, what am I going to do in this new normal?’”

The first year of the Great Recession, 2008, saw a more gradual 11 per cent increase, and the numbers didn’t really take off until a few years after the recession’s official end in 2009, Haltiwange­r continued.

Huiyu Li, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, said applicatio­ns for nonemploye­r businesses have grown strongly over the last few years, so the recent growth spurt is less surprising in that context. However, the increase in the past few weeks “has been off the charts,” she said.

It’s possible some are filing with the IRS to claim benefits under the federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program, which helps independen­t contractor­s and other self-employed people. But states typically require people to show income from 2019 to claim PUA benefits.

Really, what am I going to do in this new normal?

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