SETI Startup Businesses Drive American Job Growth Why Leverage Tax Time to Reach and Support Low-Income Startup Businesses? Small Business Defines the American Economy and Generates Jobs Small businesses provide economic security and stability for millions of American families. Creating and owning a business has long been heralded as the path to financial success and self-fulfillment in the United States, and for some, creating one’s own job – self-employment – is the best possible source of employment and income. In a nation clamoring for jobs, promoting and formalizing small startup businesses provides a viable solution. Job growth in the United States is driven almost entirely by business startups, and tax season is the best time to identify, reach and offer support to the 9.8 million self-employed individuals operating startup businesses in this country. nOf the 27.5 million businesses in the United States, 99.9% are defined as small businesses with fewer than 500 employees. n9.8 million self-employed individuals – nearly two-thirds of all self-employed people – are operating business startups: unincorporated businesses less than five years old that are still in their developing stages and feature just one employee, the business owner himself. nWithout business startups, there would be no net job growth in the U.S. economy. Startups in their first year of existence create an average of 3 million jobs per year. On average in a given year, about one third of the annual job creation rate is a result of startup businesses. nThe notion that businesses bulk up and create more jobs as they age is, in the aggregate, not supported by data. Nearly all net job creation since 1980 has occurred in small business startups less than five years old. Tax Season is the Best Time to Reach Business Startups Every business startup must pay business-related taxes. This makes the tax preparation process a built-in, structured opportunity to reach out to startup businesses and provide them with access to business development and asset-building services. nAnnually, roughly 15% of all U.S. taxpayers – some 20 million people – file a Schedule C return. The Schedule C form, filed with a Form 1040, is used by sole proprietorships to report their earnings and expenses. nOn average, first-time filers make up about 10% of all Schedule C filers each year. For these 1.6 million or so first-time filers, the first encounter with business tax preparation is both intimidating and, consequently, a powerful teachable moment. Given how critical the business startup process is to net job creation, it is sadly inefficient to waste such a valuable and scalable intervention opportunity. 1200 G Street n Suite 400 n Washington, DC 20005 n 202.408.9788 n www.cfed.org Helping the Self-Employed File Taxes Builds Economic Security for American Families Providing free or affordable business tax preparation services to low-income self-employed individuals builds businesses and promotes asset-building for low-income households. By paying an affordable fee, or no fee at all, to have their business taxes prepared by trained preparers, self-employed individuals can save money and ensure that they access all the tax credits for which they are eligible. nAccording to an IRS study, nearly 72% of Schedule C filers used a paid preparer. When new startup businesses use expensive paid preparers, the challenge of filing business taxes for the first time becomes as costly as it is confusing, and those who use commercial preparers may still walk away without a solid understanding of the tax process. nMore than 13 million self-employed individuals – or 59% of all Schedule C filers – earned less than $50,000 in adjusted gross income (AGI). These filers, in particular, can benefit from saving money on tax preparation and accessing refundable tax credits. n6 million Earned Income Tax Credit filers – or 24% – also reported self-employment income. In total, these 6 million self-employed EITC filers received credits amounting to more than $36 billion. The Self-Employment Tax Initiative: Growing Businesses and Building Economic Security Unlike other microenterprise development programs, SETI focuses on the tax code and the annual tax preparation process as the primary outreach mechanism for startup businesses. The reason is simple: nearly every single business startup must formalize its existence as a business through the tax filing process. Early microenterprise development strategies typically focused on micro lending and business training and counseling. While only roughly 10% of unincorporated small businesses seek microloans in the startup phase, nearly all must pay business taxes. SETI has taken advantage of this complementary outreach strategy, recognizing that the tax season is an ideal time to reach a larger pool of self-employed individuals and provide them with access to products and services that will help them grow their businesses and build financial security. nSETI awards grants to community-based organizations that offer free or affordable tax preparation assistance to low-income, self-employed individuals. To date, SETI has partnered with 41 organizations across the country, awarding over $500,000 in grants. These local partners help SETI identify, test and refine promising practices for using the tax filing process as a means of fostering small business development. nSETI conducts research and facilitates field-building among our local partners to identify optimal ways to serve self-employed people. SETI collects and disseminates lessons learned from local partners that explore sector-specific strategies for business support, outreach and delivery strategies that promote access by underserved populations, and strategies for serving entrepreneurs beyond the tax season with asset-building and microenterprise services. nSETI promotes sound tax policy as it relates to the self-employed. SETI engages with policy partners to help analyze, understand and test the boundaries of self-employment tax policies. At the national level, SETI works with the Aspen Institute, the National Association for the Self-Employed, the Association for Enterprise Opportunity, the National Community Tax Coalition and the IRS Small Business & Self-Employment Division. At the local level, our partners in both the microenterprise and the free tax preparation fields are important participants in this policy dialogue. About CFED CFED expands economic opportunity by helping Americans start and grow businesses, go to college, own a home and save for their children’s and own economic futures. We identify promising ideas, test and refine them in communities to find out what works, craft policies and products to help good ideas reach scale, and develop partnerships to promote lasting change. We bring together community practice, public policy and private markets in new and effective ways to achieve greater economic impact. SETI gratefully acknowledges the support of our funders: Capital One, Citi, Bank of America, Sam’s Club, The Annie E. Casey Foundation, The Walmart Foundation, Morgan Stanley, the Northwest Area Foundation and Charles Schwab Bank. 1200 G Street n Suite 400 n Washington, DC 20005 n 202.408.9788 n www.cfed.org
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