BCPB Home > Benchmarks > Rankings > Regional Indicator 10: Net New Business Formation

Regional Indicator 10: Net New Business Formation

  Why It's Important
The number of net new business formations is an important measure of economic and entrepreneurial activity.

Regional Indicator Ten measures net business formation by subtracting the number of business bankruptcies from the number of businesses incorporated in a given year.

There were more new business formations per capita in BC in each of 2005, 2006 and 2007 than in any other year between 1990 and 2004. The previous maximum had held since 1994.

BC averaged 5.5 net business incorporations per 1,000 population between 1990 and 2001, a trough year. Growth rates in 2002 through 2004 were above average and a there was a 25 percent jump in 2005. Although net incorporations have continued to grow the pace is slower. There were 6,400 more net business formations in 2005 than in 2004, 2,500 more in 2006 than 2005 and only 880 more in 2007.

Vancouver accounts for roughly 70 percent of all net incorporations in the province. Regional BC generates another 17 percent and half of the remaining 13 percent comes from Victoria while Abbotsford and Kelowna provide less than 4 percent each.

Vancouver generates new incorporations well in excess of its 50 percent population share and the other areas of the province, especially Regional BC, generate less than their population shares.

>> Other regional indicators