Competitiveness, entrepreneurship, and economic performance: Evidence from factor-, efficiency-, and innovation-driven countries
Many scholars have highlighted the importance of economic competitiveness for entrepreneurial activity, and hence economic growth. However, few studies quantitatively analyse the interrelationship between competitiveness and its role in increasing entrepreneurial activity at various stages of develo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ekonomski anali 2019, Vol.64 (221), p.33-64 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many scholars have highlighted the importance of economic competitiveness for
entrepreneurial activity, and hence economic growth. However, few studies
quantitatively analyse the interrelationship between competitiveness and its
role in increasing entrepreneurial activity at various stages of
development. The aim of this study is to fill this gap in the
entrepreneurship literature and to study the causal relationship between the
?pillars? of competitiveness and the different macroeconomic effects of
entrepreneurship, mediated by entrepreneurial behaviour, in a panel of 81
factor-, efficiency-, and innovation-driven countries during 2012-2017.
Using a MIMIC model, the results show that innovation, higher education, and
technological readiness have a positive and significant impact on the level
of entrepreneurial activity in the three groups of countries. In addition,
development of the financial market and market size has a positive impact on
entrepreneurship in factor-driven countries. Higher education and
institutional strengthening have a positive and significant impact on the
level of entrepreneurship in the efficiency- and innovation-driven
countries, but are not significant in factor-driven countries. Moreover, the
impact of infrastructure on the level of entrepreneurial activity in the
factor-, efficiency-, and innovationdriven countries is positive. Good
entrepreneurial behaviour generates a simultaneous and/or medium-term
favourable effect on the growth of gross domestic product, exports, imports,
and employment rate. Therefore, besides immediate growth, it also assures
sustainable economic and social progress in the analysed countries. Our
results confirm previous findings of empirical studies in the field. These
findings are consistent with received economic theory on how national
context affects entrepreneurial activity.
nema |
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ISSN: | 0013-3264 1820-7375 |
DOI: | 10.2298/EKA1921033R |