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    The modest pace of the U.S. economic recovery has a silver lining, as the expansion shows signs of lasting almost twice as long as average.
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    Americans stepped up purchases at retail businesses in May, spending more on cars, home improvements and sporting goods.
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    Chief executives for the largest U.S. companies are more optimistic about sales over the next six months and plan to add more workers.
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Business ownership rises in ’11

– The slow improvement in the economy gave a huge boost to entrepreneurship in the U.S. last year, according to a study.

More than 29 million people were starting or running new businesses in 2011, the study released Thursday by Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., and Baruch College in New York shows. That was a 60 percent gain from 2010, when entrepreneurship was hurt by uncertainty about the economy.

The gain also matched the increase in entrepreneurship recorded in 2005, when the economy and small businesses were booming.

A pickup in entrepreneurship indicates that people were getting more confident about the economy and were therefore willing to take a chance on starting a business. However, it also reflects a still-weak job market: Many people chose to start companies because they couldn’t find jobs or were tired of looking.

Still, researchers at the colleges say the report’s findings are a positive sign for the economy. They found that nearly 40 percent of the entrepreneurs they counted expected to create more than five new jobs each in the next five years. Many economists have said the economy can’t gain momentum unless small businesses pick up the pace of their hiring.

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