The relationship between innovation and informal entrepreneurship: evidence from a developing country

Yeri Tordecilla Avila, Jana Schmutzler, P. M. Marquez Rodriguez, Eduardo Gómez Araujo
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Specifically, the authors used the GEM data of 2016 for Colombia, covering 2,069 observations (a representative sample at the country level), evaluating the relationship between innovativeness and business registration for the early stage of the entrepreneurial process. Given the nature of our dependent variable, the authors estimated a logistic regression model.FindingsDifferent from what the authors hypothesized, they did not find empirical evidence for a positive correlation between an innovative product or service and business registration. Instead, businesses that compete with many others offering the same product/service have a higher tendency to register at the Chamber of Commerce. Contrarily of what might be suspected, opportunity-based entrepreneurship – as opposed to necessity-based – is not a relevant variable when formalizing a business, providing evidence for our hypothesis that necessity-based entrepreneurship cannot be equalized with informal entrepreneurship. Additionally, the authors show that an entrepreneur with higher socioeconomic status is more likely to register his company.Research limitations/implicationsThe results provide first exploratory evidence that the benefit evaluation may play a role in formalizing a start-up, thus calling for future research that not only tackles the influence of registration costs and administrative burden but rather looks at the outcome of a cost-benefit analysis. The data imply several limitations which future research should address: variables measuring the innovativeness of the product/service are rather coarse measures and need to be expanded and detailed in future research. Additionally, the authors acknowledge that a relatively high number of missing values may generate a selection bias in our population sample. Finally, because of situating the research in a developing country, the research results may lack generalizability. Therefore, researchers are encouraged to test the proposed propositions further.Practical implicationsIn a country like Colombia with very high levels of informality, it is necessary that the government fully understands the role of innovation in the formalization process of start-ups. The results indicate that a differentiation of support mechanisms to increase the formalization of businesses according to the different stages of their development may be necessary and that aside from costs, benefits of formalization play a role. A higher level of formality is not only related to economic growth but also much better protection of workers, therefore going beyond the reduction of registration costs and the implied administrative burden should be an additional public policy target for decreasing informality. 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引用次数: 6

Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to evaluate whether entrepreneurs with an innovative product/service are more likely to formally register their businesses. Understanding the decision of business registration as a rational choice of the entrepreneurs, where she weighs the costs versus the benefits of such formalization, the study expands the literature on informal entrepreneurship by looking at the benefit-side rather than the typically evaluated cost-side of an individual cost-benefit evaluation.Design/methodology/approachThe authors relied on the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) adult population survey to evaluate the hypothesis. Specifically, the authors used the GEM data of 2016 for Colombia, covering 2,069 observations (a representative sample at the country level), evaluating the relationship between innovativeness and business registration for the early stage of the entrepreneurial process. Given the nature of our dependent variable, the authors estimated a logistic regression model.FindingsDifferent from what the authors hypothesized, they did not find empirical evidence for a positive correlation between an innovative product or service and business registration. Instead, businesses that compete with many others offering the same product/service have a higher tendency to register at the Chamber of Commerce. Contrarily of what might be suspected, opportunity-based entrepreneurship – as opposed to necessity-based – is not a relevant variable when formalizing a business, providing evidence for our hypothesis that necessity-based entrepreneurship cannot be equalized with informal entrepreneurship. Additionally, the authors show that an entrepreneur with higher socioeconomic status is more likely to register his company.Research limitations/implicationsThe results provide first exploratory evidence that the benefit evaluation may play a role in formalizing a start-up, thus calling for future research that not only tackles the influence of registration costs and administrative burden but rather looks at the outcome of a cost-benefit analysis. The data imply several limitations which future research should address: variables measuring the innovativeness of the product/service are rather coarse measures and need to be expanded and detailed in future research. Additionally, the authors acknowledge that a relatively high number of missing values may generate a selection bias in our population sample. Finally, because of situating the research in a developing country, the research results may lack generalizability. Therefore, researchers are encouraged to test the proposed propositions further.Practical implicationsIn a country like Colombia with very high levels of informality, it is necessary that the government fully understands the role of innovation in the formalization process of start-ups. The results indicate that a differentiation of support mechanisms to increase the formalization of businesses according to the different stages of their development may be necessary and that aside from costs, benefits of formalization play a role. A higher level of formality is not only related to economic growth but also much better protection of workers, therefore going beyond the reduction of registration costs and the implied administrative burden should be an additional public policy target for decreasing informality. Finally, the correlation of socioeconomic stratum with the decision to register hints at a varying evaluation of formalization, a point that merits attention by government and academia.Originality/valueThe study shifts the focus from the evaluation of solely costs for business registering as a barrier to start-up formalization to the cost-benefit analysis. The authors propose – and show – that such an evaluation is not generalizable for all kinds of business. Specifically, the authors show that a start-up is more likely to register when it competes with a large number of competitors than when it competes with a smaller number of others offering the same. At the same time, the authors also show that the stage at which the start-up company is at influences the decision to formalize.
创新与非正式企业家精神的关系:来自发展中国家的证据
本文旨在评估拥有创新产品/服务的企业家是否更有可能正式注册他们的企业。将商业注册的决定理解为企业家的理性选择,在这里她权衡了这种正规化的成本与收益,该研究通过关注收益方面而不是个人成本收益评估的典型评估成本方面来扩展非正式创业的文献。设计/方法/方法作者依靠全球创业观察(GEM)的成人人口调查来评估这一假设。具体而言,作者使用了2016年哥伦比亚创业板的数据,涵盖了2069个观察结果(国家层面的代表性样本),评估了创业过程早期创新与商业注册之间的关系。考虑到因变量的性质,作者估计了一个逻辑回归模型。与作者的假设不同,他们没有发现创新产品或服务与商业注册之间正相关的实证证据。相反,与许多其他提供相同产品/服务的企业竞争的企业更倾向于在商会注册。与可能怀疑的相反,基于机会的企业家精神-与基于需求的企业家精神相反-在企业正规化时不是一个相关变量,这为我们的假设提供了证据,即基于需求的企业家精神不能与非正式的企业家精神等同起来。此外,作者还表明,社会经济地位较高的企业家更有可能注册自己的公司。研究局限/启示研究结果首次提供了探索性证据,表明效益评估可能在初创企业的正规化中发挥作用,因此要求未来的研究不仅要解决注册成本和行政负担的影响,而且要关注成本效益分析的结果。这些数据暗示了未来研究应该解决的几个限制:衡量产品/服务创新性的变量是相当粗糙的措施,需要在未来的研究中扩展和详细。此外,作者承认,相对较多的缺失值可能会在我们的总体样本中产生选择偏差。最后,由于研究地点在发展中国家,研究结果可能缺乏普遍性。因此,鼓励研究人员进一步测试所提出的命题。在哥伦比亚这样一个非正式性非常高的国家,政府有必要充分认识创新在初创企业正规化过程中的作用。研究结果表明,为提高企业正规化程度,有必要根据企业发展的不同阶段制定不同的支持机制,而且除了成本之外,正规化的效益也在发挥作用。正规程度的提高不仅与经济增长有关,而且还能更好地保护工人,因此,在减少登记费用和隐含的行政负担之外,应成为减少非正规程度的另一项公共政策目标。最后,社会经济阶层与注册决定的相关性暗示了对形式化的不同评估,这一点值得政府和学术界注意。独创性/价值本研究将重点从单纯评估企业注册成本作为创业正规化障碍转移到成本效益分析。作者提出——并表明——这样的评估并不适用于所有类型的业务。具体来说,作者指出,当一家初创企业与大量竞争者竞争时,它更有可能注册,而不是与提供相同产品的少数竞争者竞争时。同时,作者还表明,创业公司所处的阶段影响着正式化的决定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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