On the Institutional Foundations of the Varieties of Entrepreneurship in Europe
Publication date
2020
Editors
Sanders, Mark
Marx, Axel
Stenkula, Mikael
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
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Abstract
For decades, research into the link between national institutions and entrepreneurship has been characterized by three shortcomings: First, clear-cut concepts of institutions are rare. Second, a parsimonious understanding of how a few core institutions influence entrepreneurship is missing. Third, scholars often ignore that incrementally innovative ventures constitute a distinct (and under-researched) type of entrepreneurship next to the (over-researched) form of radically innovative, high-growth or high-tech entrepreneurship. This chapter seeks to illustrate how the application of the “Varieties-of-Capitalism” (VoC) reasoning does not only enable focused rather than eclectic analyses of institutional influences on entrepreneurship but also reveals the institutionally induced equifinality of the varieties of entrepreneurship across Europe. These insights invite future entrepreneurship research to move away from the ideology that displays radically innovative entrepreneurship as, by far, the most desirable form of entrepreneurship. This finding also invites policymakers to target entrepreneurial support measures more specifically to their economy’s institutional environment.
Keywords
Entrepreneurship, Varieties-of-Capitalism, National institutions, Institutional complementarities
Citation
Herrmann, A 2020, On the Institutional Foundations of the Varieties of Entrepreneurship in Europe. in M Sanders, A Marx & M Stenkula (eds), The Entrepreneurial Society : A Reform Strategy for Italy, Germany and the UK. International Studies in Entrepreneurship, vol. 44, Springer, pp. 71-90. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-61007-7_4