Seeing the World As It Is – Statistics

Many years ago, I was chatting with a neighbour at my parent’s home on beautiful Saturna Island, located between Vancouver and Victoria on British Columbia’s idyllic West Coast. She asked me what I did for a living, and I told her I was a tax accountant. She assumed I meant personal tax returns, so I told her I did corporate tax work primarily for companies claiming tax incentives for research and development. I could see from her reaction she thought I was talking about large corporations like Microsoft or General Motors. But what I really meant was companies like Antony Scott Systems Design Limited. You know, a small Canadian-controlled private corporation with a single shareholder and maybe two software developers on payroll. The truth is that most of us have a somewhat distorted view of the world around us. Talk about the world of business and corporate tax, and most Canadians wouldn’t realize that more than two thirds of Canadians working in the private sector work for companies with fewer than 50 employees. What’s more, these firms average only about 3.3 staff members. Not long ago, I read a series of articles in Canada’s Globe and Mail (supposedly Canada’s national business paper). The reporter described 3 successful startups out of Toronto. One of them had more than 500 employees. That would have made it a large corporation according to Statistics Canada. The other two had 150 and 220 respectively. None of those 3 companies were startups. Sure, they might have been at some point. But the same could be said of Google or Microsoft. That was when I began to realize the importance of statistics. Statistics help us to see the world as it really is.

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Launch – June 16th, 2023

The MAIN STREET JOURNAL was launched online in 2023, as a kind of Canadian, small business counterpoint to the venerable WALL STREET JOURNAL (WSJ), established in New York City in 1889.

Canada’s small businesses are smaller than most people think.  

This is true for people that work in small businesses, for policymakers, business schools, and the business press. The self-employed and other small business owners don’t ‘get no respect’ and yet about 73% of private sector employment in Canada is made up of the 2.85 million self-employed individuals, and 1.3 million small employer businesses which average less than 7 employees. 

We believe it’s time that these workers, and the small business owner-managers that employ them, got some respect. What’s more, we believe that business schools and policymakers should get out of their ivory towers and take a walk on Main Street! 

73.2 % of private sector employment is provided by small business