Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
David Evans, Linda Leighton (1989)
Some Empirical Aspects of EntrepreneurshipThe American Economic Review, 79
Simon Scott (1998)
A P ] 2 8 N ov 2 00 4 THE RESIDUE DETERMINANT
David Evans, Boyan Jovanovic (1989)
An Estimated Model of Entrepreneurial Choice under Liquidity ConstraintsJournal of Political Economy, 97
Timothy Bates (1990)
Entrepreneur Human Capital Inputs and Small Business LongevityThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 72
David Evans, Linda Leighton (1990)
Small business formation by unemployed and employed workersSmall Business Economics, 2
Y. Georgellis, J. Sessions, N. Tsitsianis (2005)
Windfalls, Wealth, and the Transition to Self-EmploymentSmall Business Economics, 25
Kamhon Kan, W. Tsai (2006)
Entrepreneurship and Risk AversionSmall Business Economics, 26
O Hart, J Moore (1994)
A theory of debt based on the inalienability of human capitalThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 109
S. Parker (2004)
The Economics of Self-Employment and Entrepreneurship: Characteristics of entrepreneurs and the environment for entrepreneurship
Charles Holt, Susan Laury (2002)
Risk Aversion and Incentive EffectsAndrew Young School of Policy Studies Research Paper Series
David Blanchflower, Bruce Meyer (1991)
A Longitudinal Analysis of Young Entrepreneurs in Australia and the United StatesERPN: Labor Economics (Topic)
M. Petersen, R. Rajan (1993)
The Benefits of Firm-Creditor Relationships: Evidence from small business data. *
David Evans, Linda Leighton (1989)
The determinants of changes in U.S. self-employment, 1968–1987Small Business Economics, 1
CA Holt, SK Laury (2002)
Risk aversion and incentive effectsThe American Economic Review, 92
David Blanchflower, Bruce Meyer (1994)
A longitudinal analysis of the young self-employed in Australia and the United StatesSmall Business Economics, 6
Dwight Jaffee, T. Russell (1976)
Imperfect Information, Uncertainty, and Credit RationingQuarterly Journal of Economics, 90
(2002)
The small business innovation research program: Challenges and opportunities
J. Stiglitz, A. Weiss (1981)
Credit Rationing in Markets with Imperfect InformationThe American Economic Review, 71
DS Evans, LS Leighton (1989)
The determinants of changes in U.S. self-employmentSmall Business Economics, 1
G. Rudinger (2001)
What Makes an Entrepreneur
R. Cressy (2000)
Credit rationing or entrepreneurial risk aversion? An alternative explanation for the Evans and Jovanovic findingEconomics Letters, 66
M. Petersen, R. Rajan (1994)
The Benefits of Lending Relationships: Evidence from Small Business DataJournal of Finance, 49
L. Palich, D. Bagby (1995)
Using Cognitive Theory to Explain Entrepreneurial Risk-Taking: Challenging Conventional WisdomJournal of Business Venturing, 10
S. Parker (2005)
The Economics of Entrepreneurship: What We Know and What We Don'tFoundations and Trends in Entrepreneurship, 1
S Parker (2004)
The economics of self-employment and entrepreneurship
O. Hart, John. Moore (1991)
A Theory of Debt Based on the Inalienability of Human CapitalNBER Working Paper Series
L. Branscomb, Philip Auerswald (2002)
Between Invention and Innovation An Analysis of Funding for Early-Stage Technology DevelopmentIO: Productivity
E. Douglas, D. Shepherd (2002)
Self-Employment as a Career Choice: Attitudes, Entrepreneurial Intentions, and Utility MaximizationEntrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 26
M. Lévesque, C. Schade (2005)
Intuitive optimizing: experimental findings on time allocation decisions with newly formed venturesJournal of Business Venturing, 20
Hean Keh, Maw Foo, Boon Lim (2002)
Opportunity Evaluation under Risky Conditions: The Cognitive Processes of EntrepreneursEntrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 27
S. Parker (2009)
The Economics of Entrepreneurship: List of tables
D. Meza, David Webb (1987)
Too Much Investment: A Problem of Asymmetric InformationQuarterly Journal of Economics, 102
This paper empirically examines the role of personal capital in the entry decision for US high-technology entrepreneurs. Our innovative approach utilizes both survey data and data from economics-based field experiments, which enables us to elicit and control for the risk attitudes of individual entrepreneurs in the study. Empirical findings suggest that (1) Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grants, (2) credit cards, and (3) earnings from a salaried job are among the most important sources of funds for entrepreneurs in their decision to start up a firm. Our findings support Evans and Jovanovic (Journal of Political Economy 97(4):808–827, 1989) in that wealth appears to have a positive impact on the probability of starting up a firm, even when controlling for risk attitudes; however, risk attitudes do not appear to have a strong role to play in the entry decision overall. Policy implications suggest that firm start-ups are dependent on access to capital in both initial and early stages of development, and that government funding, including SBIR grants, is an important source of capital for potential and nascent high-technology entrepreneurs.
Small Business Economics – Springer Journals
Published: Jun 5, 2009
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.