The Emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics: The Emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics

Author:

Language: English
Cover of the book The Emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics: The Emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics

Subject for The Emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics: The...

Approximative price 98.28 €

Subject to availability at the publisher.

Add to cartAdd to cart
Publication date:
248 p. · 22.9x15.2 cm
Provides insights on the theory of entrepreneurship in the economy and research on entrepreneurship. This book contributes to the emergence of the Entrepreneurial Economics field, in which, the study of patterns in the complex, seemingly chaotic and unpredictable process of entrepreneurship and its role in the economy stands central.
Part I. 1.Foreword: The emergence of Entrepreneurial Economics (T. Vinig, R. van der Voort). 2.Economics, technical change, the firm and entrepreneurs: an overview from Cantillon to Schumpeter. (A. Heertje). 3.Microtheory of entrepreneurship: more exists than is recognized. (W.J. Baumol). 4.The knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship (D.B. Audretsch). 5.Entrepreneurs in the 21st century – non-destructive creation: how entrepreneurship sustains development (A.V. Bhide). Part II. 1.The persistence of regional new business formation activity over time - assessing the potential policy of promotion programs (M. Fritsch, P. Mueller). 2.Entrepreneurial orientation of Russian SME (T. Iakovleva). 3.Survival and growth of start-ups in innovation and knowledge based branches - an empirical analysis of the French ICT sector between 1993-2001 (F. Lasch, F. Le Roy, S. Yami). 4.Structure of sustainable economic value in social entrepreneurship enterprise (T.G. Strothotte, R. Wustenhagen). 5.Where and how do innovative firms find opportunities (T. Schibbye, M.-L. Verreynne). 6.Flexible institutionalization: on the role of managerial variables in technology start-ups (O. Yeheskel, M. Lerner). 7.Quantifying creative destruction: entrepreneurship and productivity in New Zealand (J. McMillan). 8.A theory of Homo Entreprenaurus (A. Kjellman, M. Ehrsten).
economists, entrepreneurs