The changing workforce is a major characteristic of the new economy.
One of the most important changes is the slowdown in U.S. population growth, characterized by the "baby bust" generation -- Americans 15 to 26 years old, born between 1965 and 1976.
In fact, according to the Hudson Institute's landmark report, Workforce 2000, and other recent studies, there will be 20% fewer new entrants to the workforce in the 1990s than in the 1970s. That is why we are seeing tighter labor markets and, in may places, actual labor shortages.
The composition of the workforce is also undergoing major changes.
The gross receipts of women-owned firms total nearly $300 billion, nearly double the amount in 1982. By the year 2000, according to McCullough, women will own more than 36% of the nation's businesses.
Nearly a third of all women-owned firms are in the West, and western states, led by Colorado, have the highest number of women-owned firms per capita in the nation. The other leaders are Alaska, Wyoming, Montana, Oregon, Kansas, Minnesota, and Nebraska.
California is 11th per capita, although it has the highest number of women-owned firms and the highest volume of receipts. Nationally, there are 1,765 women-owned firms per 100,000 residents.
The most successful women-owned firms are in metropolitan areas. The greatest growth of women-owned firms is in construction and manufacturing and the lowest is in the traditional areas of agriculture and services.
Even in services, most of the growth in women-owned firms is in non-traditional areas such as auto services, food stores and real estate.
The expanding role of women in the economy is not just limited to occupational jobs or to corporate bureaucracies. Women entrepreneurs are a driving force in the new economy, where women-owned firms are among the fastest growing.

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