1st Edition

Entrepreneurship in a Regional Context

Edited By Michael Fritsch, David J. Storey Copyright 2015
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    Enterprise and entrepreneurship is of strong interest to policy-makers because new and small firms can be a key contributor to job and wealth creation. However this contribution varies spatially, with some areas in a country having new firm formation rates that are up to three or four times higher than others. The vast majority of these new firms begin in the geographical area in which the founder lives, works or was born emphasising that entrepreneurship is a local event. The book documents a diversity of research approaches to examining the regional determinants of entrepreneurship in countries as contrasting as India and Sweden. The Editors call is for scholars to better understand the long run factors that influence enterprise at the local and regional level. For policy makers the Editors challenge is for them to be much clearer about the targets for their policies. Is it new firms, new jobs, productivity and does it matter where these targets are delivered?

    This book was published as a special issue of Regional Studies.

    1. Entrepreneurship in a Regional Context: Historical Roots, Recent Developments and Future Challenges  Michael Fritsch and David J. Storey

    2. The Long Persistence of Regional Levels of Entrepreneurship: Germany, 1925–2005  Michael Fritsch and Michael Wywrich

    3. Start-ups and Local Entrepreneurial Social Capital in the Municipalities of Sweden  Hans Weslund, Johan P. Larsson and Amy Rader Olsson

    4. Regional Social Legitimacy of Entrepreneurship: Implications for Entrepreneurial Intention and Start-up Behaviour  Ewald Kibler, Teemu Kautonen and Matthias Fink

    5. Entrepreneurship as an Urban Event? Empirical Evidence from European Cities  Niels Bosma and Rolf Sternberg

    6. Population Change and New Firm Formation in Urban and Rural Regions  Heike Delfmann, Sierdjan Koster, Philip McCann and Jouke van Dijk

    7. The Significance of Entry and Exit for Regional Productivity Growth  Udo Brixy

    8. Spatial Determinants of Entrepreneurship in India  Ejaz Ghani, William R. Kerr and Stephen O’Connell

    9. Is Entrepreneurship a Route Out of Deprivation?  Julian S. Frankish, Richard G. Roberts, Alex Coad and David J. Storey

    10. Regional Effect Heterogeneity of Start-up Subsidies for the Unemployed  Marco Caliendo and Steffen Künn

    Biography

    Michael Fritsch is Professor of Economics and Chair of Business Dynamics, Innovation, and Economic Change at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany. His main fields of research are new business formation processes and their impact on economic development, innovation systems, economic development strategies, as well as markets and market failure.

    David Storey, OBE, is Professor in the School of Business Management and Economics at the University of Sussex. He is interested in the financing and performance of new firms and the public policy environment in which such firms can thrive.