Nonemployer Professional, Scientific and Technical Services

We recently posted the size of the professional, scientific and technical services market in the United States, here, and today we add detail to that market post by offering the size of a subset of the market. Today we show the revenue for all nonemploying firms in this service industry which represents 8.6% of the total revenue generated by professional, scientific and technical service providers in 2009. Most nonemployer firms are individual proprietorships but some are partnerships and even corporations. The point is, they have no paid employees. There were 21 million such firms in the United States in 2009, 18.7 million of them were individual proprietorships.

Geographic reference: United States
Year: 2009
Market size: $118.3 billion
Source: “2009 Nonemployer Statistics: Geographical Area Series: Nonemployer Statistics by Legal Form of Organization: 2009,” one of the many offerings on the Census Bureau’s American FactFinder platform, available here.
Original source: U.S. Census Bureau
Posted on September 13, 2011

Veterinary Services

A sleepy looking Katie the Beagle

The downturn in the U.S. economy has not spared many but there is always some variation in how such a sharp economic slowdown hits some industries versus others. Veterinarians are among those who often see their base business less impacted than others. While dealing with declining revenues in 2009, veterinary service providers saw a decline of only 0.6% between 2008 and 2009. Of the 27 5-digit NAICS (North American Industrial Classification System) industries in the professional services sector, the veterinary services industry was one of four that saw revenues decline by 0.6% or less between 2008 and 2009. Many other professional service providers saw revenues decline by 15% or more.

Today’s market share is based on the estimated revenues earned by veterinary service providers in the United States in 2009.

Geographic reference: United States
Year: 2009
Market size: $25.64 billion
Source: “Table 6.1. Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services (NAICS 54) – Estimated Revenue for Taxable Firms: 2001 Through 2009,” page 1 and 2 of an extract from Service Annual Survey: 2009, available online here.
Original source: U.S. Bureau of the Census
Posted on August 30, 2011

Professional, Scientific and Technical Services

Professional Services

The sector of the U.S. economy that has been growing most strongly over the last decades is the Service Sector. The service sector includes all those things that provide services instead of goods so, accountants, architects, computer programmers, consultants, doctors, hair stylists, lawyers, teachers and truckers to name but a few of the activities performed by those in the Service Sector. The Census Bureau divides the Service Sector into eleven major categories and our market size today is one of those: Professional, Scientific and Technical Services, an industry whose revenues in 2009 represented 21.6% of all Service Industry revenues.

Over the period shown in the graph, 1998—2009, businesses providing professional, scientific and technical services saw their revenue grow by 85.3% which is 42.7% ahead of inflation.

Geographic reference: United States
Year: 1998 and 2009
Market size: $751.3 billion and $1,378.3 billion
Source: Services Annual Survey 2009, “Tables 1.1 Selected Service Industries – Estimated Revenue for Employer and Nonemployer Firms: 2005 through 2009,” and “Table 1.2 Selected Service Industries – Estimated Revenue for Employer Firms: 2005 through 2009,” pages 4 and 6, February 2011, available online here. Data in the graph are from earlier editions of this report series, links to which are available on a Census Bureau web page here.
Original source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Burea of the Census