If entrepreneurs are to drive job growth, they need more ways to get financing.
Workplace
Kauffman Foundation CEO makes the case for financing startups
CEO says reforms could help entrepreneurs get access to more capital.
February 5
By DIANE STAFFORD
The Kansas City Star
Speaking Tuesday to the National Press Club in Washington, Tom McDonnell, the new chief executive of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, said financing innovations were helping startups gain access to capital, but regulatory reforms are needed to smooth the path.
McDonnell used the national platform to summarize recommendations in the Kansas City foundations annual State of Entrepreneurship report.
The 2013 report calls for building on the Jumpstart Our Businesses Act of 2012, known as the JOBS Act, which included provisions about equity crowdfunding.
That source of startup capital allows a large number of investors to get relatively small shares of equity, often through Internet purchases. Such pooled investments can help a new venture get off the ground even if larger angel investors arent interested.
The report said the growth of crowdfunding sites is necessary because of a 10-year drought in initial public offerings and an erosion in the venture capital model.
But, Kauffman experts said, the Securities and Exchange Commission must clarify crowdfunding rules without pre-emptively (strangling) crowdfunding through onerous regulations.
One Kauffman recommendation about equity funding is the use of AngelList, a matching service for entrepreneurs and investors that is financed in part by the foundation.
Other key recommendations:
• Encourage wider use of Dutch auctions, as recently used by Google, rather than setting a specific initial public offering price for stock.
• Allow bank examiners more judgment calls in small local banks to remove some of the banks regulatory costs and risk aversion.
• Create longer-term venture capital funds to better align general partners interests with those of limited partners.
• Allow shareholders to vote on whether Sarbanes-Oxley accounting rules apply to their company, building on the JOBS exemption to the requirements for firms with less than $1 billion in revenue.
The foundation has posted a video of McDonnells speech and a panel discussion at www.kauffman.org/financegrowth.
To reach Diane Stafford, call 816-234-4359 or send email to stafford@kcstar.com.




