A world of opportunity.Not so long ago, doing business internationally was the exclusive domain of the largest and most aggressive multinational corporations
Much of this has changed, particularly during the past decade. Countries from Eastern Europe Eastern Europe The countries of eastern Europe, especially those that were allied with the USSR in the Warsaw Pact, which was established in 1955 and dissolved in 1991. to Southern Africa
Indeed, African American businesses, from BE 100s companies such as TLC TLC total lung capacity; thin-layer chromatography. TLC abbr. 1. thin-layer chromatography 2. Beatrice International Holdings to the growing number of individual black entrepreneurs in import/export, have established a global presence. However, this reality presents a stark contrast to the most recent numbers released by the U.S. Census Bureau measuring the growth and impact of black-owned businesses. While the Census acknowledges the rapid growth in the number of our businesses (46%, from 422,1155 in 1987 to 620,912 in 1992), because of a gap in its surveying procedures, it severely distorts and underestimates the economic impact of black-owned enterprises, in terms of both sales and employment. For example, according to the Census, in 1992 black firms averaged only $52,000 in sales (with only 0.5% of them making more than $1 million) and nearly 92% of black businesses had no employees. This is because the Census counts only individual proprietorships, partnerships and Subchapter S Corporations subchapter S corporation n. the choice by a small corporation to be treated under "subchapter S" by the Internal Revenue Service, which allows the corporation to be treated like a partnership for taxation purposes. , while excluding other legal forms of business organization, including Subchapter C Corporations. Because many of the nation's largest black companies are organized under Subchapter C, they are thus excluded from the Census count. A subsequent study of minority businesses conducted by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies ("Joint Center"), headquartered in Washington, DC, is a national, nonprofit research and public policy institution or think tank. in Washington (in conjunction with BLACK ENTERPRISE and the National Minority Supplier Development Council) showed that more than half of black-owned firms (including Subchapter C Corporations) made more than $1 million in 1993, while 78% employed at least 5 people and 22% employed at least 50. As I have often said, African American business is not a sideshow See Windows SideShow. , but part of the main event--even on the international stage. We have a far greater economic impact than Census figures would indicate. We must not similarly underestimate ourselves, but rather extend our entrepreneurial reach throughout a world of economic opportunity. |
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