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Entrepreneurship has acquired central importance among the processes that affect regional economic change.
Regional entrepreneurship (re) is an emerging field within entrepreneurship research.
Contributes to research in entrepreneurship development, regional business and development, contemporary political ideologies, and changing social values this edited volume brings together research onsymbiotic themes of entrepreneurship, resource planning, and regional development and their impact on global-local business imperatives.
Part ii is an examination of entrepreneurship in regional economic develop- ment and the measurement of entrepreneurial ecosystems.
This chapter offers a review on modern entrepreneurship analysis, against the background of regional development. Regions with an entrepreneurial culture tend to be forerunners in a competitive.
14 jul 2020 entrepreneurial ecosystems as a bridging concept? a conceptual contribution to the debate on entrepreneurship and regional development.
Regions have gained a position at the forefront of the economic development policy agenda. However, the regional approach to economic strategy remains contested. This paper tests the extent to which regional policy in less competitive regions is accounting for issues relating to entrepreneurship and enterprise development as a tool for improving regional competitiveness.
Discussions in this volume critically analyze the convergence of entrepreneurship, innovation, technology, business practices, public policies, political ideologies, and consumer values for improving the global-local business paradigm to support regional development.
The results suggest that the prevalence of certain values affect levels of entrepreneurship measured as regional rates of new firm formation. There is no clear indication that beliefs about the societal and individual outcomes of entrepreneurship influence new firm formation.
Leerdoelen, 1 ) after following the course, students can summarize and explain, using.
Perhaps the most exceptional aspect of the current era of globalisation is that entrepreneurship has become the engine for local processes of economic, social and cultural development throughout the world.
Gedi's regional entrepreneurship index, the redi, is now available in an interactive online tool hosted by the london school of economics.
Entrepreneurship and innovation are arguably the main drivers of economic development today. This book explores the two in depth, at both the national and regional levels, using a variety of methodologies.
Entrepreneurship and regional development is unique in that it addresses the central factors in economic development - entrepreneurial vitality and innovation - as local and regional phenomena.
Entrepreneurship and new-firm formation processes have been en vogue in economics, in regional science, and in economic geography for about.
Entrepreneurship monitor) and a set of country’s economic indicators (gross domestic product, gross national income, and human development index). Obtained estimates support a hypothesis assuming a negative influence of entrepreneurship on regional development of developing countries (represented by gdp and gni).
A key finding of recent empirical studies is that high regional levels of entrepreneurship in terms of self-employment and new business formation tend to be rather.
As claimed in numerous previous studies on regional economic development, the fixed-effect regression results of this study also indicate that physical capital, human capital, knowledge capital, and entrepreneurship are all significant and important factors shaping regional economic output.
Entrepreneurship and regional development is unique in that it addresses the central factors in economic development - entrepreneurial vitality and innovation.
While the neoclassical growth theory considered economic growth as a process of mere accumulation of production capital, the endogenous growth theory shifted the lens to the importance of knowledge in the production process and its potential to create spillovers. We argue in this paper that there is a gap between knowledge and exploitable knowledge or economic knowledge.
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