Lecture 1/2 Flashcards
What is an entrepreneur?
Someone who creates and/or exploits change for profit by innovating, accepting risk and managing resources to areas of higher returns
What is a gazelle?
a business that grows at a rate of 20% a year for 3+ consecutive years from a base of $100k
What is a unicorn?
A tech start up that reaches a $1 billion market value
What is Bolton’s (1971) definition of a small business? (3 points) and what are the problems with this definition?
- Owned and managed by the same individuals
- legally independent
- small share of the market - price taker
problems: small in one sector is large in another, small businesses are heterogeneous (not the same)
What are some problems with measuring SME’s?
- figures only count formal businesses
- may operate in the informal economy
- no standard measure of an SME
What does Schumpeter believe?
- entrepreneur as innovator and agent of change
- uses new information to innovate (intro of new methods of production, open new markets)
What does Kirzner believe?
- entrepreneur as a carrier of knowledge
- use existing information to create business
- focus on arbitrage (differences in prices)
- entrepreneurial profits are secured on the basis of knowledge and information gaps
What is the entrepreneur as an INNOVATOR and as an ARBITRAGER?
Innovator: shifts production possibilities outwards, allows for higher output and therefore increases productivity
Arbitrager: reallocates resources in more efficient manner
What are Baumol’s 3 types of entrepreneur?
productive: benefits society and individual
unproductive: no value to society, mainly the individual
destructive: negative impact on society
What are some advantages of small businesses?
- quicker decision making
- flatter structure
- focus on smaller market
- fewer resources committed so less likely to fear failure
What are some disadvantages of small businesses?
- less professional management
- lack market power (price takers)
- reliant on internal sources of finance
- pay more for external sources of finance
What are some barriers to innovation?
- cost factors (availability of finance, direct innovation cost too high)
- knowledge factors (lack of qualified personnel, lack of info on markets)
- market factors (market dominated by established businesses)
- other factors (UK or EU gov. regulations)