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Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth

Online ISBN:
9780199783663
Print ISBN:
9780195183511
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth

David B. Audretsch,
David B. Audretsch

Ameritech Chair of Economic Development, Institute of Development Strategies

Indiana University
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Max C. Keilbach,
Max C. Keilbach

Senior Research Fellow

Max Planck Institute of Economics
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Erik E. Lehmann
Erik E. Lehmann

Professor

University of Augsburg
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Published online:
1 January 2007
Published in print:
25 May 2006
Online ISBN:
9780199783663
Print ISBN:
9780195183511
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

Public policy spanning a broad range of contexts, ranging from the European Union, to states, cities, and local communities around the globe has turned to entrepreneurship to provide the engine for economic growth, competitiveness in globally linked markets, and jobs. This book explains why entrepreneurship has emerged as a bona fide instrument of growth policy. The knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship suggests that entrepreneurship provides a crucial mechanism in the process of economic growth by serving as a conduit for knowledge spillovers. Investments in new knowledge and ideas may not automatically spill over and result in commercialization, as has typically been assumed in models of economic growth. Rather, the existence of what is introduced as the knowledge filter impedes the spillover and commercialization of investments in new ideas and knowledge. By penetrating the knowledge filter and facilitating the spillover of knowledge that might otherwise not be commercialized, entrepreneurship provides the missing link to economic growth. This new focus of entrepreneurship as a conduit transmitting the spillover of knowledge generates a series of theoretical propositions, involving not just the impact of entrepreneurship on economic performance and growth, but also the very nature of entrepreneurship. The book concludes that the new millennium may not be so much about the process of Joseph Schumpeter's creative destruction, where entrepreneurial startups displace and ultimately drive incumbent company's out of business, but rather characterized by creative construction.

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