
News Release | |
| For Immediate Release February 8, 2001 | |
Business-Friendly Dallas Often Discourages Entrepreneurs |
DALLAS (February 8, 2001) -- The pro-business attitude of state and local governments in Texas has contributed to an economic boom in the D/FW Metroplex. Yet according to a new study by the Reason Public Policy Institute in association with the Dallas-based National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA), regulatory barriers thwart new small business development, especially affecting those low-income areas that most need help-minorities, new immigrants and single parents.
"Dallas residents who want to start their own business must become experts in legal minutia that often have little or nothing to do with their ability to provide a successful service or product," said H. Sterling Burnett, NCPA senior policy analyst and the study's co-author. "Often, a business could easily provide a high quality product or service to a satisfied customer but be stymied by the maze of local regulations."
In the report, Burnett and his co-authors examine how many regulations do little to protect the health and safety of the public, yet push economic independence out of reach for those most in need of help. In addition to Dallas, the study examined regulatory environments in Atlanta, Boston and Los Angeles. While Dallas was the most business-friendly of the cities studied, the report did find that some of its regulations were particularly hard on minorities, recent immigrants, and stay-at-home single parents. For example:
"Small businesses are the engine for economic growth throughout the country and in this region," said Burnett. "While the city routinely provides incentives for big business, it sets up unnecessary roadblocks for potential entrepreneurs. Dallas should work to give entrepreneurs a leg up instead of stopping them at the starting line."
The NCPA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit public policy organization. We depend entirely on the financial support of individuals, corporations and foundations that believe in private sector solutions to public policy problems. The NCPA is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, with an office in Washington, D.C.
Richard Walker, Dallas, TX 972-386-6272 Sean Tuffnell, Dallas, TX 972-386-6272 Joan Kirby, Washington, DC 202-220-3082 Internet: http://www.ncpa.org Home | Support Us | All Issues | Social Security Debate Central | Contact Us |