Entrepreneurship and urban growth: dimensions and empirical models

Rahman, Mizan and Fatima, Nafeez (2011) Entrepreneurship and urban growth: dimensions and empirical models. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 18 (3). pp. 608-626. ISSN 1462-6004

Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/14626001111155736

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Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to look at various dimensions of entrepreneurship and the empirical models that try to explain the relationship between entrepreneurship and growth in cities for both developed (USA and Europe) and developing countries.

Design/methodology/approach – This paper provides an in-depth and extensive review of the existing literature on entrepreneurship and economic growth in cities. In most empirical studies, the growth rate of employment or unemployment rate is used as the dependent variable to analyze the effect of entrepreneurship on development. The important independent variables other than entrepreneurship (new start-ups) are localization, urbanization, level of education, age, industry structure (specialization vs competition), monopoly or competition. The economic units considered for cities are labor market areas (LMAs), standard metropolitan areas (SMAs) and consolidated metropolitan statistical areas (CMSAs). The majority of studies have utilized discrete dependent variable models such as Tobit or Probit to calculate the probability of the effect of entrepreneurship on economic growth. Other studies have applied ordinary least squares estimation to find the cross-sectional variation of employment growth that accounts for entrepreneurial activities. Panel data are employed in a number of models to control for region-specific and country-specific fixed effects.

Findings – In this paper, four important dimensions of entrepreneurship are identified. First, for entrepreneurial studies on economic growth, cities are considered to be appropriate economic units rather than states or countries. Second, there are several definitions and measurements of entrepreneurship available in the literature. Hence, empirical models and their results may vary depending on the model specification. Third, the relationship between employment growth (a proxy for economic growth) and innovative activity is dynamic in nature and thus the problem of endogeneity needs to be addressed. And, finally, entrepreneurship has a spatial dimension and that characteristic must be incorporated into the urban and regional models of entrepreneurship. Three different types of urban models are chosen to reflect these four central dimensions of entrepreneurship. All three urban models confirm the hypothesis that there exists a statistically significant and positive relationship between entrepreneurship and growth in cities. However, the causality of the relationship is not well established.

Originality/value – A critical and in-depth summary of existing quantitative work on entrepreneurship and economic growth in different cities is the original contribution of the paper.

Keywords:Cities, Entrepreneurship, Growth in cities, Knowledge spillovers, Entrepreneurship capital and clusters, Born global firms, International entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurialism, Economic growth
Subjects:N Business and Administrative studies > N120 International Business studies
Divisions:Lincoln International Business School
ID Code:7178
Deposited On:04 Jan 2013 20:17

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