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Facts About Small Businesses in Ireland During 2008

Posted: May 28th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Ask An Expert | Tags: , , , , , | Comments Off
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Gen Wright asked:


This report presents a complete picture of the contribution of small enterprises in Ireland. The report contains data on the contribution of small enterprises in industry, services and construction, cos? as statistics on jobs, the economy based on knowledge and manpower. It also includes international comparisons. In the report, a small business? defined as a company that employs fewer than 50 people. Statistics on average (50-249 people) and large enterprises (250 or most people) are included for comparison. The highlights of the report are: Industry: Production and employment dominated by medium enterprises and large * in 2005, four of the five industrial companies (81%) were small businesses with fewer than 50 employees. The company employs 50,000 people, a po'p? one fifth of total industrial employment. * The most large companies (or 50 most people) have taken over 181,100 people in 2005 and generated 93% of total turnover in the industry. * The vast majority of small businesses were owned Irish? (95%). Almost 42% of pi? Large companies have a foreign capital. Services: Pi? of 380,000 employees of small businesses in the sector * employment in the services sector, almost all companies (98%) were small. There were 82,100 small businesses, employing over 380,000 people in the service sector in 2005. That was the most the met? total employment in this sector. * Small businesses account for almost half? (49%) of total turnover in the services sector and generates a turnover of nearly? 81.6bn in 2005. * Nearly half? of small businesses in the services sector? the property? family (47%). The vast majority of these family business has occupied less than 10 people. Construction: Small businesses have occupied two thirds of all people working in construction * according to the quarterly national survey of the family, l? were 253,200 employed in construction in the fourth quarter of 2005. Of these, 211,000 indicated that they worked in small firms (fewer than 50 employees), while 24,500 indicated that they worked in large enterprises (50 or most employees). The 17,600 pi? not yet specify the number of employees to their jobs .* among the 253,200 people employed in construction, pi? 65% have worked for very small concerns employing less tha ten people. Salaries and wages: 54% of private sector employees in small businesses get in the middle? 10 -? 20 * per hour in 2006 the average hourly wage in small firms were? 15:22 in 2006 compared to? 19:38 in companies with 50 or more? workers in 2006 .* average annual salary for employees in a small amount? 32,453 of 2006. The average salary in big business was that? 44,794 a year. Knowledge-based economy: the pi? Large companies have generally shown high levels of pi? modern small enterprises in the activities of e-government * and the technology of communication that most large companies .* Almost all companies with 10 or more? employees were connected to the Internet two thirds of those businesses with fewer than 10 employees to use the Internet.Size work: almost 56% of employment in small workplaces * in all areas, 56% work in jobs in which less 50 people were employed in the second quarter of 2007. A total of 1175800 people have worked in small jobs. Of these, 839,300 were employed, 216,600 were not paid, and 107,900 are non-paid employees. These figures include farming and the public sector and the economy .* among 316,300 non-Irish nationals in employment in the second quarter of 2007, pi? of less than met? (47%) worked in workplaces.EU small compared to the value-added in small construction firms in Ireland were three times the EU average in 2005 * Almost three-quarters of manufacturing turnover in Ireland? been generated by large companies, while the EU average was 60% in 2005 .*, Ireland? registered but the gross value added per employee? 51,600 in the distribution of services. The EU average was? 33,000 per employee. * The gross value added per employee in industry in Ireland was significantly higher than the EU average for all sizes of jobs.

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