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z2003-01-30- Nyc Economic Development
is a Product Manager/CTO with a track-record of bringing a business perspective to building agile product-development teams for start-ups, and is seeking a senior role in an entrepreneurial organization building disruptive Internet-driven products.

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last edited by BillSeitz on Oct 15, 2008 1:35 pm

[William Tucker] on / efforts. "Trying to attract out-of-town businesses is a losing game," says [David Birch], founder of [Arc Analytics], a , research firm... Instead, successful cities start and grow new businesses. "Our studies show all job creation is being done by small companies with less than 100 employees," says Birch. "The Fortune 500 has actually lost jobs over the last 20 years."... What's interesting is that New York doesn't do badly in what Arc calls "significant startups" () - companies less than ten years old employing at least five people... Our problem is that, because of the city and state's unique tax burden, these new enterprises usually leave as soon as they start to expand... Perhaps the most disastrous policy has been the city's refusal to honor the Internal Revenue Service's "[Subchapter S]" classification, which allows startup corporations to avoid the double taxation of corporate dividends. New York City is the only jurisdiction in the country that squeezes startups in this fashion... Says Rad Chillarege, founder of 's Center for Software Engineering. "The next stage (of the [Information Economy]) is going to be applying that technology to other businesses. For this you need a confluence of different industries. But that's exactly New York's strength."


 




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