Last Updated :
-
July 3, 2019
Wisconsin Business & Employment Growth Since 2009
- 0 fewer businesses
- 0 fewer employees
- nan% decline in total wages
- $0 decrease in annual wages per employee
- nan% decrease in wages per employee
Since 2009, the number of businesses in Wisconsin has grown by nan% (nan% less than the national average of 11.4%). Employment in Wisconsin has grown by nan% (nan% less than the national average of 13.6%). Wages have grown by nan% since the end of the Great Recession. This wage growth is nan% less than the national average of 25.7%.
The average weekly wage in Wisconsin of $0 is inf% below the national average of $1,101. The gap between the national average has widened from inf% a widening of nan% since the end of the recession.
Sector Growth
Business Sector Growth
The sector that has had the strongest growth [in number of businesses] is the
sector, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The sector that has has the largest decline is the
sector, which has declined by 0.0% since the recession.
Employment Sector Growth
The sector that has had the strongest employment growth [in number of employees] is the
sector, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The sector that has has the largest employment decline in number of employees is the
sector, which has declined by 0.0% since the recession.
Weekly Wage Growth By Sector
The sector that has had the strongest wage growth is the
sector, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The sector that has has the smallest wage growth is the
sector, which has declined by 100.0% since the recession.
Industry Growth
Business Industry Growth
The top industry that has had the largest increase in the number of businesses is the
industry, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The top industry that has has the largest decline in the number of businesses is the
industry, which has declined by 100.0% since the recession.
Employment Industry Growth
The top industry that has had the largest increase in the number of employees is the
industry, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The top industry that has has the largest decline in the number of employees is the
industry, which has declined by 100.0% since the recession.
Weekly Wage Growth By Industry
The top industry that has had the strongest wage growth is the
industry, which has increased by 0.0% since 2009. The top industry that has has the largest wage decline is the
industry, which has declined by 100.0% since the recession.
Company Size
Business Growth By Company Size
Table: Change in the number of Businesses by Size of Business, since the Recession:
Company Size | Q1 2018 | Q1 2010 | % Change |
---|
Fewer than 5 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
5-9 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
10-19 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
20-49 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
50-99 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
100-249 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
250-499 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
500-999 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
More Than 1,000 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
Employment Growth by Company Size
Table: Change in the number of Employees by Size of Business, since the Recession:
Company Size | Q1 2018 | Q1 2010 | % Change |
---|
Fewer than 5 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
5-9 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
10-19 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
20-49 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
50-99 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
100-249 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
250-499 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
500-999 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
More Than 1,000 Employees | 0 | 0 | nan% |
Weekly Wage Growth by Company Size
Table: Change Average Weekly Wage by Size Since the Recession:
Company Size | Q1 2018 | Q1 2010 | % Change |
---|
Fewer than 5 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
5-9 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
10-19 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
20-49 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
50-99 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
100-249 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
250-499 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
500-999 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
More Than 1,000 Employees | $0 | $0 | nan% |
Data Sources
About the Writer
This page was created and is maintained by Kurt Tietjen, Founder of Stavera, High Peak Media & HomeGearWorks.com. Kurt is an executive, data scientist and software engineer who holds an MBA in Management Information Systems. In 2010, he partnered with scientists at Northwestern University to launch The Street Wire. This was one of the first mainstream uses of what would become “Narrative Science”, an artificial intelligence platform specializing in natural language generation. You can contact Kurt on LinkedIn here.