Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe

This paper examines the influencing factors of becoming informal investors in two groups of Central European countries: the innovation-driven (Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia and Slovakia) and efficiency-driven economies (Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland and Romania), based on the GEM (Global Entrepren...

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Main Authors: Györfy Lehel, Madaras Szilárd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-02-01
Series:Economics and Business
Subjects:
l26
m13
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0006
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spelling doaj-8c84606bd7e345958b2fb1519dd9b4c62021-09-05T21:00:42ZengSciendoEconomics and Business1407-73372256-03942020-02-01341789110.2478/eb-2020-0006eb-2020-0006Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central EuropeGyörfy Lehel0Madaras Szilárd1Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaSapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania, Miercurea Ciuc, RomaniaThis paper examines the influencing factors of becoming informal investors in two groups of Central European countries: the innovation-driven (Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia and Slovakia) and efficiency-driven economies (Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland and Romania), based on the GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) database from 2014. According to the results, in the studied innovation-driven economies of Central Europe the probability of becoming an informal investor is higher for those, who know other entrepreneurs, who are confident in their own entrepreneurial skills, who are in the higher percentile of the household income, who are older and male. The results also suggest that in the studied efficiency-driven economies of Central Europe the probability of becoming an informal investor is higher for those who are confident in the own entrepreneurial skills, who know other entrepreneurs, who are in the higher percentile of the household income, who are older and male. The probability is decreased, if somebody is employed full-time. The study emphasises similarities instead of differences regarding the analysed aspect between the two groups of countries.https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0006entrepreneurshipglobal entrepreneurship monitorinformal investmentstart-upsl26m13
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Györfy Lehel
Madaras Szilárd
spellingShingle Györfy Lehel
Madaras Szilárd
Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
Economics and Business
entrepreneurship
global entrepreneurship monitor
informal investment
start-ups
l26
m13
author_facet Györfy Lehel
Madaras Szilárd
author_sort Györfy Lehel
title Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
title_short Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
title_full Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
title_fullStr Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
title_full_unstemmed Influencing Factors of the Informal Investment in Central Europe
title_sort influencing factors of the informal investment in central europe
publisher Sciendo
series Economics and Business
issn 1407-7337
2256-0394
publishDate 2020-02-01
description This paper examines the influencing factors of becoming informal investors in two groups of Central European countries: the innovation-driven (Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia and Slovakia) and efficiency-driven economies (Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland and Romania), based on the GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) database from 2014. According to the results, in the studied innovation-driven economies of Central Europe the probability of becoming an informal investor is higher for those, who know other entrepreneurs, who are confident in their own entrepreneurial skills, who are in the higher percentile of the household income, who are older and male. The results also suggest that in the studied efficiency-driven economies of Central Europe the probability of becoming an informal investor is higher for those who are confident in the own entrepreneurial skills, who know other entrepreneurs, who are in the higher percentile of the household income, who are older and male. The probability is decreased, if somebody is employed full-time. The study emphasises similarities instead of differences regarding the analysed aspect between the two groups of countries.
topic entrepreneurship
global entrepreneurship monitor
informal investment
start-ups
l26
m13
url https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0006
work_keys_str_mv AT gyorfylehel influencingfactorsoftheinformalinvestmentincentraleurope
AT madarasszilard influencingfactorsoftheinformalinvestmentincentraleurope
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