OREANDA-NEWS. Following two consecutive slumps, start-up activity in Germany is back on the rise. 2013 saw some 868,000 people turn to self-employment, corresponding to around 12% or 93,000 business start-ups more than in 2012. This is the key result produced by the current KfW Start-up Monitor. This rise can be traced back to a considerable increase in the number of part-time entrepreneurs - 562,000 compared with 460,000 during the year before. In contrast, at 306,000, the number of full-time entrepreneurs remains virtually unchanged (2012: 315,000).

The wide disparity stems from the economic framework conditions in 2013. The pressure of having to go self-employed on a full-time basis remains low as expected, due to the continuously positive situation on the job market. In contrast, it is worth noting how positively part-time start-up activity is responding to the considerable rise in domestic demand - despite the generally subdued economic situation. "The market is there - and many people are evidently taking advantage of it to earn a little extra by becoming self-employed on a part-time basis," says Dr Jorg Zeuner, the KfW Group's Chief Economist. "This opportunity seems especially attractive to individuals who were previously unemployed, as they can be increasingly found among the part-time entrepreneurs." Part-time entrepreneurs are implementing explicit business ideas more often than was the case in the previous year, that means that were not driven into self-employment quite as much by a lack of alternative employment. Indeed, they have a household income comparable to those starting up business on a full-time basis. For these individuals, starting up a business part-time may well simply be an intermediate step on the road towards full-time self-employment.

"In 2014, the predicted economic revival and the positive situation on the job market, which are expected to continue, will presumably lead to a repeated rise in start-up activity. Again, this will very much be driven by part-time entrepreneurs," says Dr Zeuner, explaining what he expects of the ongoing year.