Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1019360 Journal of Business Venturing 2014 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This article analyzes macro-level determinants of national rates of formal versus informal entrepreneurship.•Its empirically-supported model shows how formal and informal entrepreneurship are driven differently.•This model clarifies the conflicting findings in previous research about the effects of socioeconomic, institutional, and cultural factors.

Based on the eclectic theory of entrepreneurship, this article analyzes macro-level determinants of national rates of formal versus informal entrepreneurship. Our evaluation of the factors identified in this theory reveals a set of empirically-testable, higher-order determinants: economic opportunities, quality of governance, macro-level resources and abilities, performance-based culture and socially-supportive culture. The results of our analysis obtained through the PLS (partial least squares) approach to structural equation modeling contribute to the entrepreneurship literature by providing an empirically-supported model that shows how formal and informal entrepreneurship are driven differently. This model clarifies the conflicting findings in previous research about the effects of socioeconomic, institutional, and cultural factors on entrepreneurship rates across countries. Finally, by showing the effect of each determinant on formal and informal entrepreneurship, this study has important implications for policymakers as well as businesses.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
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