THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Similar documents
Measuring the Returns to Rural Entrepreneurship Development

Testing Baumol: Institutional Quality and the Productivity of Entrepreneurship *

ANALYSIS OF THE FACTORS THAT DISCOURAGE THE BUSINESSES DEVELOPMENT

SOME CLASSIC VIEWS ON ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Summary

Entrepreneurship and Economics

International Journal of Recent Scientific Research

Entrepreneurship and the Business Cycle

ECONOMIC PROCESS AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Linking Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth in Sweden,

YOUTH: DOES UNEMPLOYMENT LEAD TO SELF-EMPLOYMENT?

Overview of the Austrian School theories of capital and business cycles and implications for agent-based modeling

Citation for published version (APA): van Praag, C. M. (1997). Determinants of succesful entrepreneurship Amsterdam: UvA

This publication has been financed thanks to the assistance of the PEKAO SA.

The Economics of Ignorance and Coordination

Entrepreneurship and Economic Development: A Discourse on Selected Conceptual Issues

Growth in Open Economies, Schumpeterian Models

ECONOMIC CRISIS AND THE NATURE OF ENTREPRENEURIAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES1. Božidar Leković. Slobodan Marić

10/11/2017. Chapter 6. The graph shows that average hourly earnings for employees (and selfemployed people) doubled since 1960

Entrepreneurship Development & Project Management Theories of Entrepreneurship

Self-employment against employment or unemployment: Markov transitions across the business cycle

2. Economic Freedom and Entrepreneurship

Do Institutions have a Greater Effect on Female Entrepreneurs?

4. Discovery versus creation: implications of the Austrian view of the market process Sandye Gloria-Palermo

GENERAL INTRODUCTION FIRST DRAFT. In 1933 Michael Kalecki, a young self-taught economist, published in

NASCENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND THE LEVEL OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Sander Wennekers, André van Stel, Roy Thurik and Paul Reynolds ISSN 05-9

Political Entrepreneurship- A Review of its Historical Aspects

The Evolving Domain of Entrepreneurship Research

Europe and the US: Preferences for Redistribution

The Economics of Entrepreneurship: What We Know and What We Don t

Revisiting regional innovation policies through entrepreneurship

Recession and the Resurgent Entrepreneur; National-Level Effects of the Business Cycle on European Entrepreneurship. Senior Thesis.

THE FAILURE OF THE NEW SUBJECTIVIST REVOLUTION

CHAPTER 1 The Connection between Entrepreneurship and Economic Prosperity: Theory and Evidence

Maksym Khomenko

The two-way relationship between entrepreneurship and economic performance. Chantal Hartog Simon Parker André van Stel Roy Thurik

The Effectiveness of Entrepreneurial Activities for Economic Development: A Route to Innovation and Job Generation

ECON 141 Ch. 2 Dr. Mohammed Alwosabi

BUSINESS CYCLES AND ECONOMIC RECOVERY IN EUROPEAN UNION. A SURVEY

Regional Income Trends and Convergence

Entrepreneurship and the Business Cycle

Expanding the notion of entrepreneurship capital in American counties: A panel data analysis of

BEYOND BUZZWORDS: CREATING KNOWLEDGE AND RESEARCH BASED INSIGHTS THAT ENTREPRENEURS CAN LEVERAGE Prof Boris Urban

A Comparison of the Theories of Joseph Alois Schumpeter and John. Maynard Keynes. Aubrey Poon

The Impact of Local Government Economic Development Programs on City- Level Entrepreneurial Activity: Evidence from Southern California.

Constitutional Environment and Entrepreneurship: An Empirical Study. Wei Zhang. A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the

Risk, Uncertainty, and Nonprofit Entrepreneurship By Fredrik O. Andersson

An Empirical Study on Entrepreneurial Perceptionamong Students in Oman

The Alert and Creative Entrepreneur: A Clarification Israel M. Kirzner

DOES A FREE PRESS NURTURE ENTREPRENEURSHIP?

International Migration and the Economic Crisis: Understanding the links and shaping policy responses

Public Entrepreneurs: The Local Market for Public Goods

UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH Martin Carree and Roy Thurik ISSN 05-14

Durham Research Online

DISCUSSION PAPERS Department of Economics University of Copenhagen

political budget cycles

Who wants to be an entrepreneur?

Determinants of policy entrepreneur success in New York s local fracking struggles

Entrepreneurship and Comparative Advantage

Migrants Entrepreneurs in East Indonesia

A Neo-Mengerian Examination of the Regulatory Process

VI Mises Seminar. Cultural Approval, Economic Freedom, and Entrepreneurship

Agnieszka Pawlak. Determinants of entrepreneurial intentions of young people a comparative study of Poland and Finland

Characteristics of the Social entrepreneur: a neoclassical perspective

THE NEED FOR AN ENTREPRENEURIAL THEORY OF THE FIRM

Determinants of the Risk Attitude in Entrepreneurship: Evidence from Latin America

AUTHOR ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Research Report 0012/E An eclectic theory of entrepreneurship: policies, institutions and culture

Entrepreneurship and Rent-Seeking Behavior

IMPACT OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN ECONOMIC GROWTH CASE OF A SMALL ECONOMY: ALBANIA. Key Words: Albania, Economic Growth, Entrepreneurship, Innovation.

Jörn H. Block 1,2,3,4 Lennart Hoogerheide 1,4,6 Roy Thurik 1,3,5,6,7

Origin and Evolution of the Term "Entrepreneur" in English

A Literature Review on Institutional Change and Entrepreneurship

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF THE BALTIC STATES ( )

Austrian Public Choice: An empirical investigation

Discussion of "Worker s Remittances and the Equilibrium RER: Theory and Evidence" by Barajas, Chami, Hakura and Montiel

Notes on Charles Lindblom s The Market System

Productivity, Output, and Unemployment in the Short Run. Productivity, Output, and Unemployment in the Short Run

1. The Relationship Between Party Control, Latino CVAP and the Passage of Bills Benefitting Immigrants

State of the art in entrepreneurship research

1 The role of new businesses in regional development: introduction and overview Michael Fritsch

Notes on exam in International Economics, 16 January, Answer the following five questions in a short and concise fashion: (5 points each)

Niels Bosma EIM Business & Policy Research, Zoetermeer, The Netherlands

Discussion Papers. Amelie Constant Klaus F. Zimmermann. Self-Employment Dynamics Across the Business Cycle: Migrants Versus Natives

The Knowledge Spillover Theory of Entrepreneurship

Available online at ScienceDirect

The Theory of Knowledge Spillover Entrepreneurship*

From Collected Works of Michał Kalecki Volume II (Jerzy Osiatinyński editor, Clarendon Press, Oxford: 1991)

ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND ECONOMIC FREEDOM

The Evolving Domain of Entrepreneurship Research

Aidis, Ruta, Laws and Customs: Entrepreneurship, Institutions and Gender During Economic Transition

A Cross-Country Study of Social Entrepreneurship: Comparing risk taking and risk perception attitudes.

Legal Mirrors of Entrepreneurship

Who wants to be an entrepreneur?

The word Entrepreneurship is derived from the French verb ENTERPRENDRE.

Entrepreneurship and Industry Growth

Michael Kotrous. Creighton University Class of 2015

Political Economics II Spring Lectures 4-5 Part II Partisan Politics and Political Agency. Torsten Persson, IIES

Hayek on entrepreneurship: competition, market process and cultural evolution

Master Thesis in Entrepreneurship

This is a repository copy of One size does not fit all: revisiting regional entrepreneurship policy for enhanced entrepreneurial ecosystems.

Transcription:

1 THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP Marija Krumina University of Latvia Baltic International Centre for Economic Policy Studies (BICEPS) University of Latvia 75th Conference Human resources and social policy Riga, March 2, 2017

2 Structure of presentation Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship - Early theories of entrepreneurship - Frank Knight and the uncertainty concept - Joseph Schumpeter and the creative destruction - Israel Kirzner and the Austrian school - William Baumol and the role of incentives (institutional context) An overview of the empirical studies on the relationship between entrepreneurship & business cycles - Pro-cyclicality - Counter-cyclicality - A-cyclicality - Pre-cyclicality

Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship 3

4 Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship (1) Early Theories of Entrepreneurship Richard Cantillon (1680-1734) R. Cantillon (1732, Essay on the Nature of Commerce in General) was the first of the major economic thinkers to define the entrepreneur as an agent who buys means of production at certain prices to combine them into a new product. He identified the willingness to bear the personal financial risk of a business venture as the defining characteristic of an entrepreneur. In the early 1800s, Jean Baptise Say (1767-1832) improved Cantillion s definition by adding that the entrepreneur brings people together to build a productive item. Say stressed the role of the entrepreneur in creating value by moving resources out of less productive areas and into more productive ones. John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) (1848, Principals of Political Economy) used the term entrepreneur to refer to a person who assumes both the risk and the management of a business.

5 Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship (2) Frank Knight and the Uncertainty Concept Frank Knight (1885-1972) first introduced the dimension of risk-taking as a central characteristic of entrepreneurship. He adopted the theory of early economists such as Richard Cantillon and J B Say, and added the dimension of risk-taking. This theory considers uncertainty as a factor of production, and holds the main function of the entrepreneur as acting in anticipation of future events. The entrepreneur earns profit as a reward for taking such risks.

6 Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship (3) Joseph Schumpeter and the Creative Destruction Joseph Schumpeter s (1883-1950) innovation theory of entrepreneurship (1949); stressed the role of the entrepreneur as an innovator. Entrepreneurship takes place when the entrepreneur creates a new product, introduces a new way of making a product, discovers a new market, finds a new source of raw material. Disequilibrium role of entrepreneur. Disruptive force as the source of true economic progress. Schumpeter s innovation theory however ignores the entrepreneur s risk taking ability and organizational skills, and place undue importance on innovation. This theory applies to large-scale businesses, but economic conditions force small entrepreneurs to imitate rather than innovate. Other economists have added a dimension to imitating and adapting to innovation. This entails successful imitation by adapting a product to a niche in a better way than the original product.

7 Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship (4) Israel Kirzner and the Austrian School Israel Kirzner (1930-) views entrepreneurship as an equilibrating force in which entrepreneurs discover previously unnoticed profit opportunities and act on them, bringing markets toward their zero economic profit, long-run equilibria. Spontaneous learning and alertness - two major characteristics of entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship as is the transformation of spontaneous learning to conscious knowledge, motivated by the prospects of some gain. Kirzner s arbitraging entrepreneur initiates a change that moves a market toward equilibrium, rather than disrupting an existing equilibrium as it does Schumpeter s entrepreneur.

8 Historical development of the phenomenon of entrepreneurship (5) William Baumol and the role of incentives Baumol's (1990, Entrepreneurship: productive, unproductive and destructive) theory of productive and unproductive entrepreneurship) He hypothesizes that entrepreneurial individuals channel their effort in different directions depending on the quality of prevailing economic, political, and legal institutions. This institutional structure determines the relative reward to investing entrepreneurial energies into productive market activities versus unproductive political and legal activities (e.g., lobbying and lawsuits). Good institutions channel effort into productive entrepreneurship, sustaining higher rates of economic growth.

An overview of the empirical studies on the relationship between entrepreneurship & business cycles 9

An overview of the empirical studies on the relationship between entrepreneurship & business cycles (1) 10 Pro-cyclicality Shleifer 1986 Theoretical quantitative model Audretsch, Acs 1994 Pooled cross-section regression model Rampini 2004 Theoretical model of the optimal contracting Klapper at. 2014 Pooled OLS Pro-cyclicality of entrepreneurship emerging as an effect of entrepreneurs` decision not to internalize external effects of their decisions to innovate and invest. New firm startups are positively correlated with economic growth, pursuing of innovative activities and university-based research Entrepreneurial activity is pro-cyclical due to the risk associated with it. Strong pro-cyclical pattern of new firm registration

An overview of the empirical studies on the relationship between entrepreneurship & business cycles (2) 11 Counter-cyclicality Caballero, Hamour 1991 The model of creative destruction. Francois, Lloyd-Ellis 2003 Theoretical; quantitative model. Blanchflower 2000 Pooled OLS, fixed effects models, probit models Perotin 1996 Poisson Maximum Likelihood (ML) estimations Milan et al. 2014 Random effects binary logit models Productivity improving activities are undertaken during recessions when opportunity costs are temporarily low. Entrepreneurs do innovations and produce when costs are low (during recessions) and sale during booms when demand is high. Negative relationships between selfemployment rates and unemployment rates for most OECD countries. Exceptions were Italy and Iceland. Cooperative creations tend to be more counter-cyclical than conventional firms. Own-account workers are less likely to hire employees during recessions.

An overview of the empirical studies on the relationship between entrepreneurship & business cycles (3) 12 Neither pro-cyclicality nor counter-cyclicality Bernanke, Gertler 1993 Theoretical neoclassical model of real business cycle. Carlstrom, Fuerst 1997 General equilibrium model. Pre-cyclicality (Leading indicator) Agency costs of investing are inversely related to entrepreneurs` net worth; emergence of accelerator effect during expansion phase of business cycle; asymmetric shocks on productivity Assumption that share of entrepreneurs in population is constant and does not fluctuate along business cycle. Koellinger, Thurik 2009 Bivariate correlation, regression analysis. Entrepreneurship is a leading indicator of business cycles.

Thank you 13