Immigrants Behind 25 Percent of Startups
Foreign-born entrepreneurs were behind one in four
A team of researchers at Duke University estimated
that 25 percent of technology and engineering companies started from 1995 to
2005 had at least one senior executive--a founder, chief executive, president or
chief technology officer--born outside the United States. Immigrant entrepreneurs' companies employed 450,000
workers and generated $52 billion in sales in 2005, according to the
survey. Their contributions to corporate coffers,
employment and "It's one thing if your gardener gets deported,"
said the project's Delhi-born lead researcher, Vivek Wadhwa. "But if these
entrepreneurs leave, we're really denting our intellectual-property
creation." Wadhwa, Duke's executive in residence and the
founder of two tech startups in The study comes nearly eight years after an
influential report from the AnnaLee Saxenian, now dean of the
Saxenian, also co-author of the new study, said the
research debunks the notion that immigrants who come to the
"The advantage of entrepreneurs is that they're
generally creating new opportunities and new wealth that didn't even exist
before them," Saxenian said. "Just by leaving your home country, you're taking a
risk, and that means you're willing to take risks in business. You put them in
an environment that supports entrepreneurship, and this is the logical
outcome." Researchers started with a list of 28,766 companies
classified as technology and engineering companies in Dun and Bradstreet's
Million Dollar Database, which lists companies with more than $1 million in
revenue and at least 20 employees. Researchers were able to reach senior
executives to determine the backgrounds of key founders for 2,054 of the tech
startups. Immigrants were most likely to start companies in
the semiconductor, communications and software niches. They were least likely to
enter the defense sector. One of the study's biggest surprises was the extent
to which Indians led the entrepreneurial pack. Of an estimated 7,300
Indian immigrants founded more tech startups from
1995 to 2005 than people from the four next biggest
sources-- "People who come from
The Duke researchers also found that foreign-born
inventors living in the Without permanent citizenship, inventors are more
likely to take valuable intellectual property elsewhere, and
"The bottom line is: Why aren't these people
citizens?" Wadhwa said. "We're giving away the keys to the kingdom. This is a
big, big deal once you figure out what this means for
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