Briefing paper
The young and the restless: the contribution of young firms to the economy
Publisher
Startups
Small business
Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
Economic growth
Business conditions
Youth
Australia
Description
Government policy often supports small businesses – the so-called ‘engine room’ of the economy – through lower taxes, lighter labour regulation and grants. Yet this paper finds it is actually young firms that play the most outsized role in economic dynamism in Australia. Using firm-level microdata, the paper draws out this important distinction between firm size and age in firms’ economic contribution, highlighting three key facts.
Key findings
- Young firms are positive contributors to economic growth while small old firms detract from economic growth.
- There is vast heterogeneity among the performance of young firms. By age five, high-performing young firms employ twice the number of workers than the average firm of the same age and are over 40% more productive.
- Firm exit is critical to the economy’s productivity. Exiting firms are roughly 20% less productive than the industry average even five years before they exit. Their eventual exit reallocates resources towards more productive firms.
Policymakers need to reconsider size-based business policies, better understand the vast differences in performance amongst young firms and critically review policy-induced frictions to firm exit.
Publication Details
Copyright:
e61 Institute 2025. Reproduced with permission.
License type:
All Rights Reserved
Access Rights Type:
open
Series:
Micro note No. 28
Post date:
1 Oct 2025
