1,256 research outputs found
Intrapreneurship; Conceptualizing entrepreneurial employee behaviour
This paper discusses the similarities and differences between intrapreneurship and independent entrepreneurship. Most but not all of the activities and behavioural aspects of the latter are also typical of the former phenomenon. Key differential elements of independent entrepreneurship are the investment of personal financial means and the related financial risk taking, a higher degree of autonomy, and legal and fiscal aspects of establishing a new independent business. Based on this discussion an integral conceptual model of intrapreneurial behaviour is presented. The paper closes with conclusions.
Entrepreneurship and economic performance: a macro perspective
The present paper provides a theoretical framework of the relationship between the rate of entrepreneurship and national economic performance. The first part deals with some aspects of the recent economics literature on the relation between entrepreneurship and small business on the one hand, and economic growth on the other. In particular, it gives a summary of some work of the EIM/CASBEC research group in The Netherlands. In the second part, a framework is presented linking entrepreneurship and growth�to different levels of aggregation. The last part of the paper illustrates the framework with some historical case studies. The present paper supplements Wennekers, Uhlaner and Thurik (2002)�and is concerned with the causes of the rate of entrepreneurship.
Self-employment in 23 OECD countries
Studie naar de invloed van culturele en economische verschillen in het niveau van zelfstandig ondernemerschap in meer dan twintig Westerse landen en Japan in de periode 1974-1994. Ontevredenheid met de maatschappij en met het leven in het algemeen is een beslissende factor voor een hoger percentage zelfstandigen in een land.
Intrapreneurship - An international study
This paper presents the results of a novel international study of intrapreneurship ( i.e., employees developing new business activities for their employer), carried out in eleven countries in the framework of the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. At the individual level, it is found that intrapreneurs are much more likely to have intentions to start a new independent business than other employees. However, at the macro level�the study finds a negative correlation between intrapreneurship and independent entrepreneurship. One explanation for these contrasting outcomes is�a diverging effect of per capita income on intrapreneurship (positive effect) and early-stage entrepreneurial activity (negative effect). �
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2008 The Netherlands
The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) is a research program executed annually with the aim to obtain internationally comparative high quality research data on entrepreneurial activity at the national level. Over the years, GEM has expanded from 10 countries in 1999 to 43 countries in 2008. In this report, we focus specifically on entrepreneurial attitudes, activity and aspirations in the Netherlands. Hereby, we follow the entrepreneurial engagement ladder, consisting of latent entrepreneurship, earlystage entrepreneurial activity, established business activity and entrepreneurial exits. In order to measure earlystage entrepreneurial activity in a country, GEM developed the Total earlystage Entrepreneurial Activity rate. This rate includes both the prevalence of nascent entrepreneurs and that of owner-managers of young or new businesses. The group of nascent entrepreneurs refers to individuals within the adult population who are actively involved in their own new firm start-up, as full or part owner. The GEM data collection covers the complete life cycle of the entrepreneurial process. This cycle starts with personal assessments of attitudes and perceptions towards entrepreneurship. The life cycle continues with individuals who have the intention to start a business within the next three years (pre-nascent or prospective entrepreneurs). Next, the cycle refers to individuals at the point when they commit resources to start a business they expect to own themselves (nascent entrepreneurs), when they currently own and manage a new business that has paid salaries for more than three months but not more than 42 months (new business owners), and when they own and manage an established business that has been in operation for more than 42 months (established business owners). The aggregate of nascent entrepreneurship and young/new business entrepreneurship forms the TEA.
Scanning the future of entrepreneurship: a scenario analysis for The Netherlands
Verkenning van de mogelijkheden om het aantal zelfstandige ondernemingen te verklaren via een empirisch model. Met een dergelijk model kunnen tevens scenario’s gemaakt worden voor de toekomstige ontwikkeling van het aantal ondernemingen in Nederland. Enkele modellen worden stap voor stap opgebouwd. Het model dat gebruikt wordt voor de scenarioanalyse verklaart het aantal ondernemingen, toe- en uittreding uit economische en demografische variabelen en de afwijking van het veronderstelde evenwichtsniveau van het aantal ondernemingen. Dit evenwichtsniveau voor Nederland volgt uit een andere EIM-studie 'Business Ownership and Economic Growth: An Empirical Investigation' (bestelnummer H9809) waarbij gegevens uit 23 OESO-landen gebruikt zijn. De modellen laten zien dat de spectaculaire stijging van het aantal ondernemers in het afgelopen decennium in Nederland mede toegeschreven kan worden aan een inhaalslag op de achterstand die Nederland had ten opzichte van het veronderstelde evenwichtsniveau. Voor de nabije toekomst wordt een verdere stijging van het percentage ondernemers in de beroepsbevolking verwacht, maar deze groei zal minder sterk zijn dan in het recente verleden. In het model is - naast het afgenomen effect van de inhaalslag - ook de vergrijzing een belangrijke oorzaak van deze afnemende groei.
A Note on Entrepreneurship, Small Business and Economic Growth
The aim of the present short paper is to show that since the 1970s the world has changed considerably, and that this change has had consequences for the current policy debate on the determinants of economic growth. Our paper deals with some aspects of the recent scientific literature on the relation between entrepreneurship and small business, on the one hand, and economic growth, on the other. In particular, it gives a summary of some work of the EIM/CASBEC research group in the Netherlands. It refers to scientific analyses showing that countries that are lagging behind in the process of restructuring will pay a penalty in terms of forgone growth. It also pays attention to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), a new and large multinational project focusing on the collection and analysis of internationally comparable data on the rate of entrepreneurial activity.entrepreneurship;growth;economic development;market structure;small firms
On the renormalized scalar density in quenched QCD
We present a non-perturbative determination of the renormalization factor Z_S
of the scalar density in quenched QCD with overlap fermions. Results are
obtained at four values of the lattice spacing. By combining Z_S with results
for the low-energy constant Sigma we are able to compute the renormalization
group invariant scalar condensate in the continuum limit with a total accuracy
of 7%, excluding dynamical quark effects. Our result translates to
Sigma_msbar(2 GeV)=(285+/-9 MeV)^3 if the scale is set by the kaon decay
constant. We have also performed scaling studies of the pseudoscalar decay
constant and the vector mass. Our results indicate that quantities computed
using overlap quarks exhibit excellent scaling behaviour, with small residual
lattice artifacts.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
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