The Day Tah

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The jobs engine. Notice that nearly 25% of small business makes less than $25,000 per year. Given that the most recent census puts median income at $33,161 this means they likely have no employees. If we scope the IRS data, assuming the median income provided by the Census, it is correct to conclude that 90% of small businesses have less than 75 EEs. The generally talked about tax hikes would affect some of these companies, but not many.

In today’s headlines marketwatch reporters and analysts are confused, at least for the drama. I’ve marked out the clients, hence the source of the data from the two reporting firms.

Most small businesses employ very few people, less than 5. A very small engine to power a major economy of the world.

Extremes

“The short-lived bubble economy at the end of the 1980s was a period of collective hysteria, a crazy time of frothy fortunes, pie-in-the-sky projects, and lavish living that suddenly evaporated. The impact of the crash of the stock market and land prices has had profound consequences, hammering banks, businesses, investors, borrowers, customers, and employees.”
—Jeff Kingston on Japan’s “lost decade.”

“I cut my leg with a circular saw (…) I knew I had cut myself, but I didn’t feel any pain (…) It was some kind of extreme emotional state.”
—Yamatsuka Eye describing Hanatarash’s second live performance in Osaka, 1984.