Jordan is an analyst in Research and Policy for the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
An analysis performed by the Kauffman Foundation showed that women are more capital-efficient than men.
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Diana Kander is an entrepreneur-in-residence at the Kauffman Foundation and an author at www.dianakander.com.
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People like Phill Hocking asked was it possible that the Kauffman Foundation compiled the data incorrectly?
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The Kauffman Foundation proposed some ways that the U.S. could encourage more such start-ups.
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Jared Konczal is an analyst in Research and Policy with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
More specifically, the Kauffman Foundation has found that young, fast-growing firms are the biggest job creators.
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Additional Kauffman Foundation research reveals that this engine of new jobs began sputtering before the Great Recession.
No one has ever probed that idea before, so the Kauffman Foundation taking it as a challenge.
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This past June, Carl Schramm the President and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation went further.
Kauffman Foundation analyzed the average employment of all firms as they age from year zero (birth) to year five.
The Kauffman Foundation has always been an instrumental force in entrepreneurship and a champion for the female entrepreneur.
It hasn't worked out that way, says Bob Litan, vice president for research and policy at the Kauffman Foundation.
If they did the economy would be humming, according to the Kauffman Foundation, which supports entrepreneurship research and advocacy.
Carl Schramm is University Professor at Syracuse and served as president of the Kauffman Foundation for the last ten years.
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But the Kauffman Foundation is known for doing quality work, so I think we can take that off the table.
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"There's something long-term at work here, " says Dane Stangler, research director at Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a Kansas City, Mo.
In the US, for example, according to the Kauffman Foundation, start-ups have historically been the catalyst for long-term employment growth.
As a consequence, the Kauffman Foundation reported, the percentage of companies started in the U.S. by immigrants has begun to decline.
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According to an article published by the Kauffman Foundation earlier last year, women only make up 35% of startup business owners.
In fact, according to a study by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, these Boomers are actually driving a new entrepreneurship boom.
In fact, a Kauffman Foundation study on business and gender shows women are outperformed by men in many areas of business.
The Kauffman Foundation blew the whistle hardest of them all with its May 2012 self-flagellating report, now required reading in VC-land.
And a growing number of foundations, such as the Kauffman Foundation, are doing their best to spread the gospel of reform and renewal.
More specifically, as I wrote in June 2011, the Kauffman Foundation has found that young, fast-growing firms are the biggest job creators.
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Litan is vice president for research and policy at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, www.kauffman.org, and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Last year, the Kauffman Foundation noted that virtually all U.S. net job creation since 1980 has come from companies less than five years old.
Research from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation has shown that much of the job growth in America in recent years has come from startups.
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The Kauffman Foundation reports that nearly half of Americans ages 8 to 24 have either already started a business or want to start one.
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