Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.

Evasive entrepreneurship (circumvention and exploitation of institutions by entrepreneurs) is a prevalent practice in many developing economies. Extant literature on the topic falls short of providing adequate theories to explain its triggers, mechanisms, and consequences. Leveraging extensive surve...

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Main Authors: Nnaoke Ufere, James Gaskin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247012
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spelling doaj-d68892e9afa2432bbd9a318ea7c50a262021-08-07T04:30:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01162e024701210.1371/journal.pone.0247012Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.Nnaoke UfereJames GaskinEvasive entrepreneurship (circumvention and exploitation of institutions by entrepreneurs) is a prevalent practice in many developing economies. Extant literature on the topic falls short of providing adequate theories to explain its triggers, mechanisms, and consequences. Leveraging extensive survey data from the World Bank, we used structural equation modeling to examine the relationship between evasive entrepreneurial behavior-tax evasion and bribery-and the relative payoff of such practices. Of the 2599 Nigerian entrepreneurs in our sample, the majority admitted to engaging in evasive entrepreneurship. The data suggest that institutional factors thought to constrain entrepreneurship in emerging markets are counter-intuitively perceived by founders as opportunities to earn large rents and improve firm performance. Our results emphasize the urgent need to eliminate institutional constraints that paradoxically enable the growth of evasive entrepreneurship in emerging economies. Our results also suggest that prevailing local conventions involving evasive behavior may motivate nascent entrepreneurs to imitate bribery and tax evasion, normalizing malfeasance as 'best practice.'https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247012
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nnaoke Ufere
James Gaskin
spellingShingle Nnaoke Ufere
James Gaskin
Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nnaoke Ufere
James Gaskin
author_sort Nnaoke Ufere
title Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
title_short Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
title_full Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
title_fullStr Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
title_full_unstemmed Evasive entrepreneurship: Circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
title_sort evasive entrepreneurship: circumventing and exploiting institutional impediments for new profit opportunity in an emerging market.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Evasive entrepreneurship (circumvention and exploitation of institutions by entrepreneurs) is a prevalent practice in many developing economies. Extant literature on the topic falls short of providing adequate theories to explain its triggers, mechanisms, and consequences. Leveraging extensive survey data from the World Bank, we used structural equation modeling to examine the relationship between evasive entrepreneurial behavior-tax evasion and bribery-and the relative payoff of such practices. Of the 2599 Nigerian entrepreneurs in our sample, the majority admitted to engaging in evasive entrepreneurship. The data suggest that institutional factors thought to constrain entrepreneurship in emerging markets are counter-intuitively perceived by founders as opportunities to earn large rents and improve firm performance. Our results emphasize the urgent need to eliminate institutional constraints that paradoxically enable the growth of evasive entrepreneurship in emerging economies. Our results also suggest that prevailing local conventions involving evasive behavior may motivate nascent entrepreneurs to imitate bribery and tax evasion, normalizing malfeasance as 'best practice.'
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247012
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AT jamesgaskin evasiveentrepreneurshipcircumventingandexploitinginstitutionalimpedimentsfornewprofitopportunityinanemergingmarket
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