Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1019543 Journal of Business Venturing 2013 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

There is an increasing tendency for government policy to promote entrepreneurship for its apparent economic benefit. Accordingly, governments seek to employ entrepreneurship education as a means to stimulate increased levels of economic activity. However, the economic benefit of entrepreneurship education has proven difficult to substantiate. It is perceived that the problem is partly due to the multi-definitional perspectives of entrepreneurship. What stems from this is a lack of a theoretically sound conceptual grounding that will assist policy-makers and educators to locate a program within specific objectives. This article sets out an argument, extending from economic theory, to provide purpose for entrepreneurship education and proposes a policy framework supported by analysis of the Australian government policy context.

► Discusses entrepreneurship education relative to socioeconomic purpose and policy ► Conceptualizes different forms of entrepreneurship for specific economic purposes ► Distinguishes enterprise and business as different types of organization ► Links entrepreneurial behavior to potential economic contributions ► Theoretically integrates entrepreneurship education across economic levels

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