70% of New Companies Fail in Brazil

A Brazilian store Between 2000 and 2006 726,600 companies were established each year, in average, in Brazil. That's what shows the 2006 Company Demography Research disclosed at the end of last month, by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistic (IBGE). In the meantime, 493,800 were closed.

The average annual balance of surviving companies was 233,000, equivalent to 32.07% of all new establishments.

The average annual growth in the total of companies active in the period was 5.7%. In 2006, there were little more than 5 million companies active in the country.

According to the report, the greater number of companies in 2001 was the result both of greater entry of companies in the period analyzed (829,302) and due to a lower number of companies leaving (330,276). The low growth in 2006, in turn, was the result of average new entries of (710,868), and a greater number of exits in the period (664,489).

The study also shows that the average rate of entry of companies in the market, between 2000 and 2006, was 16.9%, whereas average exits were 11.2%.

Activities related to agriculture, livestock farming, wood, forestry exploration, fisheries and services represented the greatest rates of company entries. The lowest rates were identified in industrial activities.

The IBGE study also shows that business established between 2001 and 2006 was responsible for 46.5% of formal employment in companies in the period.

Of every ten formal jobs created by new companies (with up to five years in operation), between 2000 and 2006, an average of four were in trade, three in the service sector and three in industry. With regard to company size, five of these posts were established in micro companies, three in small ones, one in medium ones and one in large ones.

The study analyzed 5.1 million establishments among the 5.7 million companies and other organizations active in the 2006 Central Company Registry.

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

IDB to Hold Its Next Annual Assembly in Brazil

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva received the president of the Inter-American Development ...

Brazilian Financial Market Applauds Tax Exemption for Foreigners

The President of Brazil’s National Association of Financial Market Institutions (ANDIMA), Alfredo Neves Penteado ...

Brazilian Sanitary Metals Firm Takes Its Goods to Middle East’s Big 5 Show

Brazilian company Metalúrgica Meber, which has a factory in the city of Bento Gonçalves, ...

Brazil’s New President to Rule a Country with Boundless Ambitions

The last few decades have witnessed a variety of efforts to encourage the multilateral ...

To Brazil, Mercosur’s Growth Is a Thorn to Market-Skeptics

The Minister of Foreign Relations of Brazil, Celso Amorim, opened this morning, in the ...

TAM/TAP Codesharing Brings Brazil and Europe Closer Together

Direct flights leaving Rio, BrasÀ­lia and São Paulo, in Brazil, for Lisbon and Porto, ...

Brazil Stocks Keep Downhill Course

Brazilian shares dragged amid continued profit taking, with the selling activity heightened by fears ...

Brazil Close to Legalize Abortion. It’s Been a 22-Year Effort.

A bill to decriminalize abortion and make it available through the Brazilian public health ...

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

By Brazzil Magazine Alice Através do Espelho (Alice Through the Looking Glass)—Based on Lewis ...

Brazilians Interest in Arabic Brings Old Book Back to Life

The Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce is relaunching the book "Elementary lessons in Arabic ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`