nep-ent New Economics Papers
on Entrepreneurship
Issue of 2024‒05‒27
eight papers chosen by
Marcus Dejardin, Université de Namur


  1. Are Immigrants More Innovative? Evidence from Entrepreneurs By Lee, Kyung Min; Kim, Mee Jung; Brown, J. David; Earle, John S.; Liu, Zhen
  2. Business Dynamics and Productivity Growth in the Netherlands By Daan Freeman; Leon Bettendorf; Gerrit Hugo van Heuvelen; Gerdien Meijerink
  3. Revisiting Granular Models of Firm Growth By Jos\'e Moran; Angelo Secchi; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud
  4. The crisis effect in TPB as a moderator for post-pandemic entrepreneurial intentions among higher education students: PLS-SEM and ANN Approach By Chahal, Jyoti; Dagar, Vishal; Dagher, Leila; Rao, Amar; Ntom Udemba, Edmund
  5. Firms and inequality in Latin America By Eslava, Marcela; Meléndez, Marcela; Ulyssea, Gabriel; Urdaneta, Nicolás; Flores, Ignacio
  6. Entrepreneurial Ecosystems as an Enabler of Technological Sovereignty: The Case of the Indian Short Form Video Market By Pillai, Neiil (Nehaal); Dietlmeier, Simon Frederic; Urmetzer, Florian
  7. (Un)Design: Training Entrepreneurial Industrial Designers for New Scenarios By D'Amico, Enrique; Del Giorgio Solfa, Federico Ph.D.
  8. Assessing the framework conditions for social innovation in rural areas By OECD

  1. By: Lee, Kyung Min; Kim, Mee Jung; Brown, J. David; Earle, John S.; Liu, Zhen
    Abstract: We evaluate the contributions of immigrant entrepreneurs to innovation in the U.S. using linked survey-administrative data on 199, 000 firms with a rich set of innovation measures and other firm and owner characteristics. We find that not only are immigrants more likely than natives to own businesses, but on average their firms display more innovation activities and outcomes. Immigrant-owned firms are particularly more likely to create completely new products, improve previous products, use new processes, and engage in both basic and applied R&D, and their efforts are reflected in substantially higher levels of patents and productivity. Immigrant owners are slightly less likely than natives to imitate products of others and to hire more employees. Delving into potential explanations of the immigrant-native differences, we study other characteristics of entrepreneurs, access to finance, choice of industry, immigrant self-selection, and effects of diversity. We find that the immigrant innovation advantage is robust to controlling for detailed characteristics of firms and owners, it holds in both high-tech and non-high-tech industries and, with the exception of productivity, it tends to be even stronger in firms owned by diverse immigrant-native teams and by diverse immigrants from different countries. The evidence from nearly all measures that immigrants tend to operate more innovative and productive firms, together with the higher share of business ownership by immigrants, implies large contributions to U.S. innovation and growth.
    Date: 2024–04–18
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:3kycm&r=ent
  2. By: Daan Freeman; Leon Bettendorf; Gerrit Hugo van Heuvelen; Gerdien Meijerink
    Abstract: This study examines the decline in firm dynamism within the Netherlands, potentially linked to the deceleration of productivity growth. We utilise a rich microdata set covering the period 2006-2016, encompassing nearly all Dutch corporations. This dataset facilitates an evaluation of start-ups’ and exiting firms’ contributions to Total Factor Productivity (TFP) growth across various industries, employing the Melitz and Polanec (2015) decomposition approach. Our findings reveal that in service sectors, the creative destruction hypothesis is substantiated, as start-ups and exiting firms positively impact overall TFP growth. In contrast, TFP growth in manufacturing is primarily driven by incumbent firms. Entry and exit dynamics in this context exert minimal or even negative influence on TFP growth. Although entrants in manufacturing initially display lower productivity than incumbents, their productivity growth outpaces that of incumbents. In services, entrants commence operations with higher initial productivity, a trait that gradually diminishes over time. Generally, entrants with relatively low productivity are predisposed to exit within five years, aligning with the ’up-or-out’ pattern.
    Keywords: productivity slowdown, firm dynamics, TFP, Netherlands
    Date: 2024
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_11071&r=ent
  3. By: Jos\'e Moran; Angelo Secchi; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud
    Abstract: We revisit "granular models of firm growth" that have been proposed in the literature to explain the anomalously slow decrease of growth volatility with firms size and how this phenomenon shapes the distribution of their growth rates. In these models, firms' sales are viewed as collections of independent "sub-units", and these non-trivial statistical properties occur as a direct result of the fat-tailed distribution of the number or sizes of these sub-units. We present and discuss new theoretical results on the relation between firm size and growth rate statistics. Our results can be understood by noting that granular models imply the existence of three types of firms: well-diversified firms, with a size evenly distributed among several sub-units; firms with many sub-units but with their total size concentrated on only a handful of them, and lastly firms which are poorly diversified simply because they are made up of a small number of sub-units. We establish new empirical facts about growth rates and their relation with size. As predicted by the model, the distribution of growth rate volatilities is to a good approximation {independent of firm size}, once rescaled by the average size-conditioned volatility. However, the tail of this distribution is much too thin to be consistent with a granular mechanism. Moreover, the moments of growth volatility scale with size in a way that is at odds with theoretical predictions. We also find that the distribution of growth rates rescaled by firm-specific volatility, which is predicted to be Gaussian by all the models we consider, remains very fat-tailed in the data, even for large firms. This paper, in ruling out the granularity scenario, suggests that the overarching mechanisms underlying the growth of firms are not satisfactorily understood, and argues that they deserve further theoretical investigations.
    Date: 2024–04
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2404.15226&r=ent
  4. By: Chahal, Jyoti; Dagar, Vishal; Dagher, Leila; Rao, Amar; Ntom Udemba, Edmund
    Abstract: This research examines college students' entrepreneurial inclinations using TPB, self-efficacy, and the crisis effect. It also examines the crisis effect's moderating influence post-pandemic. A unique analytical technique using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) was used to evaluate the model's resilience. 310 Indian university students were surveyed online. Self-efficacy is a crucial predictor of entrepreneurial tendencies among higher education students. ANN analysis confirms SEM findings that self-efficacy and perceived behavior control shape entrepreneurial desires. Despite its negative impact, the crisis effect doesn't appear to affect entrepreneurs' objectives. The crisis impact moderates all exogenous and endogenous factors except subjective norms and entrepreneurial goals, the research finds. The research also shows that students' education and geography affect their entrepreneurial inclinations. Gender, however, has little control. Policymakers and higher education administrators could boost entrepreneurial ambitions by fostering students' self-efficacy and perceived behavior control. Understanding these elements allows higher education stakeholders to create targeted interventions and support systems to foster college student entrepreneurship.
    Keywords: Entrepreneurial Intentions; Crisis-Effect; Self-efficacy; Artificial Neural Network (ANN); PLS-SEM; Post-Pandemic
    JEL: A22
    Date: 2024
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:120706&r=ent
  5. By: Eslava, Marcela; Meléndez, Marcela; Ulyssea, Gabriel; Urdaneta, Nicolás; Flores, Ignacio
    Abstract: The relationship between firms and inequality has been a focus of recent attention globally. This chapter summarizes basic facts about this relationship for Latin America. Unlike advanced economies where superstar firm growth has prompted concerns over disproportionate income growth at the top, the facts we summarize illustrate that the main concern for Latin America is the extreme prevalence of tiny businesses whose workers and owners tend to populate the bottom income segments. The empirical likelihood that these businesses improve their productivity and grow to hire more workers and pay better wages is also very low. The region displays a deficit of employment generation in SMEs, by contrast to both microbusinesses (including self-employment) and large corporations. While the former tend to remunerate both workers and owners with very low incomes, the latter pay high wages but also exhibit low labor shares.
    JEL: E20 J21 O54
    Date: 2024–04–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ehl:lserod:122760&r=ent
  6. By: Pillai, Neiil (Nehaal); Dietlmeier, Simon Frederic; Urmetzer, Florian
    Abstract: This paper examines whether the geopolitical objective of technological sovereignty is attainable and enabled by entrepreneurial ecosystems, as both concepts aim to improve economic competitiveness. A qualitative single-case study of the Indian short-form video (SFV) market, which provides some of the most innovative business-to-consumer (B2C) digital applications, was conducted based on 20 stakeholder interviews and triangulated archival data. Numerous SFV start-ups were created in the city of Bangalore after a geopolitical incident that prompted the Indian government to ban comparable Chinese SFV apps, including TikTok. The research empirically demonstrates that the Bangalore entrepreneurial ecosystem facilitated technological sovereignty in three steps based on an input-process-output (IPO) model to enable the creation of these “sovereign” Indian SFV apps. Core of the theoretical enablement process is the adaptability of an entrepreneurial ecosystem to socio-political disruptions induced by geopolitical and geoeconomic objectives. This allows for ecosystem self-sustainment and triggers technological sovereignty as ecosystem response.
    Keywords: Ecosystem; Sovereignty; Technology; Geopolitics; Innovation
    JEL: F2 I2 L1 N4 Y4
    Date: 2024–03–30
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:120620&r=ent
  7. By: D'Amico, Enrique; Del Giorgio Solfa, Federico Ph.D. (National University of La Plata)
    Abstract: The paradigm shift has revealed a need among industrial designers to have entrepreneurial capabilities. Being the most effective modality to exercise discipline today. The implementation of this approach requires reviewing the discursive scaffolding that the design has been using to set immovable high standards of complexity and quality, reducing the field of professional action and limiting the intervention alternatives. This article considers the dynamics and trends in people's lifestyles, explores possible strategies and specific content for the entrepreneurial training required by design.
    Date: 2024–04–06
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:mcet3&r=ent
  8. By: OECD
    Abstract: Rural regions across the OECD depend on a wide range of economic engines for growth, as well as the quality of place to attract and retain people. Social innovation seeks new answers to social and environmental problems, using new solutions that improve the quality of life for individuals and communities. Social innovation can be a tool to create vibrancy in rural areas by filling public service gaps, experimenting with new business models, and creating a stronger sense of community. However, not all rural areas are equally equipped to engage in social innovation. This paper provides guidance for policy makers and proposes an approach alongside a dashboard of indicators for measuring readiness and capacity to engage with social innovation in rural areas.
    Keywords: local ecosystem, measurement of social innovation, rural development, rural innovation, social economy, social entrepreneurship, social innovation
    JEL: I30 L31 O35 R11 O38
    Date: 2024–05–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:oec:cfeaaa:2024/4-en&r=ent

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