2 resultados para INCLINATION

em Corvinus Research Archive - The institutional repository for the Corvinus University of Budapest


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Contents: I. Entrepreneurial inclination during state socialism: - On entrepreneurial inclination; - Crisis, expectations, entrepreneurial inclination; - Where do entrepreneurs come from? On the third way, the second economy, and entrepreneurial inclination; ____ II. Entrepreneurial spirit and post-socialist transformation: - The upswing of entrepreneurial inclination between 1988 and 1990; - Entrepreneurship and perception of economic changes in the early 1990s; _____ III. Long-term changes and a European comparative perspective: - From crisis to crisis: long-term change of entrepreneurial inclination; - The effect of entrepreneurial inclination upon entrepreneurial career and well-being; - Entrepreneurial inclination in comparative perspective.

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The lecture has two parts. The first part – based upon Eurobarometer data - briefly investigates the proportion and social characteristics of potential entrepreneurs in European comparative perspective. It proves that the Hungarian data are close to the European average. The second part – based on Hungarian panel data (1992-2007) - examines the predictive force of entrepreneurial inclination upon future entrepreneurial career and well-being. The results reveal that potential and actual entrepreneurship have strong social similarities and lasting connections despite the great volatility of both. Entrepreneurial inclination and more concrete plans have influenced the entrepreneurial career chances with nearly identical force, without cancelling each other’s effect. Entrepreneurial motivation has also to do with subjective well-being. The “push” factors of initial dissatisfaction with work and material conditions have lost their significance while the connection between entrepreneurial inclination and satisfaction with future perspectives persists in the longer run. The matrix of original motivation and further career provides a typology of four economic actors: that of “conscious” employees, “blocked”, “forced” and „conscious” entrepreneurs.