Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy

Though current research identifies which institutions are important as boundary conditions for entrepreneurship, questions remain about how they actually influence national entrepreneurial activity, particularly through start-ups. Specifically, the authors attempt to answer the following question: H...

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Main Author: Colin D. Reddy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2019-03-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11746/PPM_2019_01_Reddy.pdf
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spelling doaj-ac76ed212f244dd8b37af4884f6876342020-11-25T02:39:22ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672019-03-0117129731210.21511/ppm.17(1).2019.2611746Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacyColin D. Reddy0Ph.D., Senior Lecturer of Business Management, Department of Business Management, Johannesburg Business School, College of Business and Economics, University of JohannesburgThough current research identifies which institutions are important as boundary conditions for entrepreneurship, questions remain about how they actually influence national entrepreneurial activity, particularly through start-ups. Specifically, the authors attempt to answer the following question: How do formal incentives influence the start-up rates across countries? Through a conceptual framework where formal incentives and societal legitimacy represent formal and informal institutions, respectively, the authors contribute to existing knowledge about national start-up activity by showing both the mechanism and conditions under which formal incentives increase the start-up rate. First, it is argued that formal incentives influence the start-up rate indirectly through the market opportunities available through economic development. Second, it is argued that these formal and informal institutions substitute for one another. The arguments are confirmed with a panel dataset on 57 countries from the World Bank Group Entrepreneurship Surveys and Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. A key implication of the findings is that early efforts at stimulating economic development, for example, by incentivizing foreign investments in new technology, can also kickstart the entrepreneurial activity as much as entrepreneurial activity also contributes to economic development in return.https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11746/PPM_2019_01_Reddy.pdfeconomic developmententrepreneurial activityformal incentivessocietal legitimacystart-up
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Colin D. Reddy
spellingShingle Colin D. Reddy
Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
Problems and Perspectives in Management
economic development
entrepreneurial activity
formal incentives
societal legitimacy
start-up
author_facet Colin D. Reddy
author_sort Colin D. Reddy
title Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
title_short Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
title_full Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
title_fullStr Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
title_full_unstemmed Cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
title_sort cross-country start-up rates and formal incentives: a moderated mediation model of economic development and societal legitimacy
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Though current research identifies which institutions are important as boundary conditions for entrepreneurship, questions remain about how they actually influence national entrepreneurial activity, particularly through start-ups. Specifically, the authors attempt to answer the following question: How do formal incentives influence the start-up rates across countries? Through a conceptual framework where formal incentives and societal legitimacy represent formal and informal institutions, respectively, the authors contribute to existing knowledge about national start-up activity by showing both the mechanism and conditions under which formal incentives increase the start-up rate. First, it is argued that formal incentives influence the start-up rate indirectly through the market opportunities available through economic development. Second, it is argued that these formal and informal institutions substitute for one another. The arguments are confirmed with a panel dataset on 57 countries from the World Bank Group Entrepreneurship Surveys and Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. A key implication of the findings is that early efforts at stimulating economic development, for example, by incentivizing foreign investments in new technology, can also kickstart the entrepreneurial activity as much as entrepreneurial activity also contributes to economic development in return.
topic economic development
entrepreneurial activity
formal incentives
societal legitimacy
start-up
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11746/PPM_2019_01_Reddy.pdf
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