Source: June 2023 Survey of Tech Coast Angel members
In 2022, TCA provided $15.4 million in funding. If we had 23% fewer members (with the criteria fully adjusting for inflation since 1982), the funding level would have dropped $3.5 million (assuming the average investment for those that dropped was the same as for the overall average of $37,500 per member).
It is important to reiterate that the negative impact nationally would be significantly more severe since this study looked only at TCA members, the majority of whom live in Southern California where wages are significantly higher than most of the country and the net worth of angel members is likely also higher. Specifically, the negative impact would be considerably more severe in the middle of the US due to differences in income and net worth compared to the coasts -- a recent national survey by ACA suggests that 53% of current investors would no longer qualify. Such a large drop in eligibility would be devastating to many angel groups particularly in America’s heartland because these groups would lose more members and some would fall well below the critical mass needed to stay viable and operating. This in turn would be devastating to capital access for companies in those parts of the country and reverse much progress that has been made in recent decades to foster innovation and early-stage companies in the underserved heartland. And in those cases where VCs follow an angel investment, any drop in the number of angel-back companies would also have an adverse effect on VC funding, even though VC funding is less reliant directly on the Accredited Investor Definition.
A more effective way to maintain and safely enhance access to capital for early-stage companies would be to provide alternative means to encourage and measure sophistication beyond simple wealth metrics. It is clear that many people with sophistication fall short of the wealth thresholds, and also no secret that many wealthy people lack sophistication as investors in this asset class. Instead, creating the option of education and sophistication tests would benefit the ecosystem by safely improving the size of the capital pool and allowing access to new investors who seek to participate in this asset class but are currently precluded due to the wealth criteria. Knowledge-based accreditation testing is a more effective solution.
Increasing the thresholds without creating an option for a sophistication test would not only hinder capital formation, but it would also halt and reverse the modest gains made in recent years getting more diversity into the investor ranks. That diversity is critical to attracting and investing in more diverse founders. Because of historical income gaps along racial lines, diverse investors have only relatively recently entered the ranks of accredited investors but if wealth criteria are raised, the more diverse investors at the bottom of the pay and wealth scale will be the first to be forced out of the investor pool. This would be an unfortunate setback in terms of access and inclusion to expand and diversify the base of investors (rather than contract it) – and spurring innovation and economic growth.