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Showing posts with the label Classical Theories

Cantillon Theory of Entrepreneurship

What is Cantillon's theory of entrepreneurship? The word "entrepreneur" has been traced back to Richard Cantillon, an Irish banker with French roots writing in the early 1700s, before Adam Smith. Cantillon distinguished between entrepreneurs with nonfixed incomes and employees with fixed incomes. Cantillon considered the entrepreneurs as those who undertake to bear and overcome uncertainty by investing, paying expenses and hoping for a return. Cantillon viewed a wide slice of society as entrepreneurial because they bear uncertainty, including: "All the other entrepreneurs, like those who take charge of mines, theaters, buildings, the traders by sea and land, restaurateurs, pastry cooks, innkeepers, etc., as well as the entrepreneurs of their own labor who need no capital to establish themselves, like journeymen artisans, coppersmiths, seamstresses, chimney sweeps, water transporters, live with uncertainty and proportion themselves to their customers. Master

The Great Man Theory of Entrepreneurship

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One of the most popular 19th century theories of entrepreneurship is the "great man theory". The theory's popularity is probably owing to the historian Thomas Carlyle. Yes, I know, it sounds sexist from the start, but let us stretch the meaning and say it's the great people theory, and try to move it along from there. Great people theories are often heard in historical tales of WW2, with Hitler, Stalin, Churchill, Eisenhower, Roosevelt, and a few others leading the way. In reality, tens of millions of people were involved in the war and a myriad of events occurred over time that may have impacted the outcomes of the war. The same is done with entrepreneurs, pitting Bill Gates against Steve Jobs in the battle for the PC, for instance. The great people theory holds that most of the important decisions about how the economic and political world works today were made by just a handful of people. These gifted individuals are the heroes and heroines of every age. Another po

Birth Order Theory of Entrepreneurship

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The Birth Order Theory is a psychological theory that suggests that the order in which individuals are born in relation to their siblings has a significant impact on their personality development and experiences throughout their lives. This theory was popularized by psychoanalysts such as Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and Alfred Adler in the 1950s and has since become a widely studied and debated topic in the field of psychology. According to the Birth Order Hypothesis, depending on their position in the birth order, each child in a family goes through a different set of conditions and experiences. For instance, it's well knowledge that first-born children are more mature and goal-oriented, whereas younger siblings may be more inventive and rebellious. Only children may be more self-assured and egocentric, but middle children are regarded to be more autonomous and adaptable. The Birth Order Theory suggests that these differences in personality and behaviour can be traced back to the un

Withdrawal of status respect theory of entrepreneurship

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What is the withdrawal of status respect theory of entrepreneurship? Everett E. Hagen was a political scientist and economist writing at MIT in the 1950s and 1960s. He sought to explain how traditional societies changed into those with continual technological progress and hence rising incomes. Here we discuss Hagen's (1963) theory of entrepreneurship. Hagen argues that a process eventually leading to entrepreneurship is triggered when a social group loses status in relation to other groups in a society. When members of a given social group perceive that they are given their due respected by the dominant groups in society, it triggers a creative spark that encourages entrepreneurial behaviors (Dana, 1995). Some examples of "withdrawal of status respect" include when: 1) a formerly higher status group is displaced by a new group; 2) a social group's symbols are insulted by the dominant group; 3) a group's symbols become unaligned with their actual economic

Creative Destruction Theory of Entrepreneurship

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Joseph Schumpeter, a prominent economist, is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field of entrepreneurship. He placed human actors at the center of economic development processes and argued that entrepreneurs played a critical role in driving innovation and economic growth. Schumpeter's view of entrepreneurship was unique in that he saw it as a disruptive force that challenged the status quo and led to the creation of new markets and industries. He believed that entrepreneurs were not simply passive actors responding to market forces, but were active agents who sought to gain power through their ability to resist social pressure and overcome limitations in existing skill sets. According to Schumpeter, entrepreneurs played a key role in driving the process of "creative destruction." This process involved the destruction of established industries and the creation of new ones through the introduction of innovative products, services, and production methods. Entrepreneurs