By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Economic development is high on the priority list
across the South, but some experts believe a contributor to
this success is being overlooked. Home-based
businesses annually bring millions of dollars to the rural
economies of the South. These are the earliest business
form, and offer rural communities the opportunity to develop
local assets and keep residents in the community. These
findings were recently released in a Southern Rural
Development Center publication titled "Home-based
businesses: Implications for the rural economy of the
South." The Center, headquartered at Mississippi State
University, released the publication written by Pamela Brown
at Texas A&M University and Glenn Muske at Oklahoma
State University. "Home-based
businesses fit so seamlessly into the community that they
simply are not noticed for what they are -- functional and
contributing micro businesses," the publication
states. In rural
southern communities, the three important factors economic
development depends on are individual entrepreneurial
spirit, local initiative to embrace change and a quality of
life that people desire. "Home-based
businesses embrace all three of these components because
they are based on the creative, entrepreneurial energy of
individuals," said Brown, Extension consumer sciences
specialist with TAMU. Despite
their importance to local rural communities, Brown said
home-based businesses are often invisible. "They
tend not to be members of Chambers of Commerce, and they
don't have a sign out front announcing their presence,"
Brown said. "They're busy doing their own thing." While
many home-based businesses thrive under these conditions,
the danger is that they will isolate themselves from their
community and think too narrowly about their
market. "Fear
often keeps a home-based business person from reaching out.
They don't know how to handle the bigness or how to garner
more capital," Brown said. "When they reach a crossroads,
they may choose to pull back because they are uncertain
about their capabilities." The
majority of home-based businesses earn less than $25,000 a
year. Many provide supplementary income, but conservative
estimates are that these businesses generate more than $10
billion of income annually in the South. Muske,
Extension home-based and micro business specialist at OSU,
said in 1989, 40 percent of home-based businesses were
service-oriented while 60 percent offered a product. By
1996, those percentages had switched. "We're
definitely seeing a service economy," Muske said. "There is
more service development than product development among
home-based businesses." While
many people start a home-based business to bring in extra
dollars, others do it for personal fulfillment. "The
main reason people operate a home-based business is control.
'I have a passion and I want to be in control of my own
life.' Running your own home-based business allows control,
family time and esteem. It's the American dream of owning
your own house and owning your own business," Muske
said. One of
the challenges facing rural communities in the 21st century
is community economic development. Home-based businesses are
an important part of the communities' success and
survival. This
publication, "Home-based businesses: Implications for the
rural economy of the South" can be viewed online at
http://www.ext.msstate.edu/srdc/hot/hot.htm.
For copies or more information, contact the Southern Rural
Development Center at (662) 325-3207. Released
February 26, 2001
Community
News
Home businesses
are important to South
For more information, contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662)
325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
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