“…Most studies on business survival rates focus on documenting trends over time, as well as by geography and industry (Phillips and Kirchhoff, 1989;Buss and Lin, 1990;Forsyth, 2005;Deller andConroy, 2016, 2017), the influence of the individual characteristics of the entrepreneur and firm, as embodied in Pena (2002) and Hormiga et al (2011a,b), or human, and structural or organizational capital (Reynolds, 1987;Brüderl et al, 1992;Boden Jr and Nucci, 2000;Pena, 2002;Bosma et al, 2004;Esteve-Pérez and Mañez-Castillejo, 2008;Backman et al, 2016). There are few studies that explore the role of the larger community or regional factors outside the control of the firm, including overall growth patterns and unemployment rates, in helping understand business survival (Campbell, 1998;Acs et al, 2007;Strotmann, 2007;Box, 2008;Renski, 2008Renski, , 2011Bosma and Schutjens, 2011;Huggins and Thompson, 2015;Deller and Conroy, 2017;Huggins et al, 2017;Ebert et al, 2019). While these latter studies include community characteristics, none examine the role of community level social capital on survival rates.…”