Entry-regulation and corruption: grease or sand in the wheels of entrepreneurship? Fresh evidence according to entrepreneurial motives

被引:3
|
作者
Dejardin, Marcus [1 ,2 ]
Laurent, Helene [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Catholic Univ Louvain, Louvain, Belgium
[2] Univ Namur, Namur, Belgium
[3] Aix Marseille Univ, AMSE, CNRS, Marseille, France
关键词
Entrepreneurship; Corruption; Regulation; Doing business; Grease the wheels; Sand the wheels; Opportunity; Necessity; Entrepreneurial motives; D73; F59; J24; L26; M13; SELF-EMPLOYMENT; INSTITUTIONS; PERFORMANCE; TRANSITION; INNOVATION; GROWTH; COSTS; RULE; LAW;
D O I
10.1007/s11187-023-00802-1
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The relationship between entry-regulation, corruption, and entrepreneurship is controversial in the literature. Using a broad cross-country dataset to deepen the investigation, this paper distinguishes opportunity and necessity-motivated entrepreneurship in different development contexts. Corruption might grease the wheels of ineffective administrative machinery in developing countries with heavy entry-regulation. Yet, the marginal effect of corruption will generally be non-significant in other developing countries and in developed countries. Moreover, our results suggest that corruption deters opportunity-motivated entrepreneurship-the type of entrepreneurship that may contribute the most to productivity, economic growth, and development-in developed countries. Corruption and regulation can have ambiguous relationships with entrepreneurship unless you take a careful look at it. We examine the impact of corruption and entry-regulation on opportunity and necessity-motivated entrepreneurship within different economic development contexts. Corruption and entry-regulation correlate negatively with entrepreneurship but might have a tempering effect on each other. Thus, we consider whether corruption reduces the negative impact of entry-regulation on entrepreneurship while remaining globally negative (i.e., the "weak view") or if it completely counterbalance the negative effect (the "strong view"). Exploiting a cross-country dataset on 105 countries over the 2003-2016 period, we find that, while corruption might somewhat temper the negative impact of a heavy administrative machinery in developing countries, this tempering effect of corruption will generally be non-significant. Furthermore, our findings suggest that corruption deters opportunity-motivated entrepreneurship-the type of entrepreneurship that may contribute the most to productivity, economic growth and development. Corruption and regulation would then be particularly harmful for economic development. The policy-maker tackling these issues would do well to consider direct effects and possible interrelationships according to context.
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页码:1223 / 1272
页数:50
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