Tilting at the Windmills of Transition: An Empirical Analysis of Spatial Systems of Entrepreneurship and Institutions in Russia
3030549089, 9783030549084
This book investigates spatial institutional variation and its influence on entrepreneurial activity in the Russian Fede
Table of contents : Acknowledgments About the Book Contents Abbreviations List of Figures List of Tables Chapter 1: Introduction References Chapter 2: Entrepreneurship and Entrepreneurial Ecosystem 2.1 Entrepreneurship 2.1.1 Understanding the Entrepreneur 2.1.2 Entrepreneurship and Growth 2.1.3 Types of Entrepreneurship 2.2 Systems of Entrepreneurship 2.2.1 Entrepreneurship and the Role of the Individual 2.2.2 Entrepreneurship and the Relevance of Context 2.2.2.1 Why Context Matters 2.2.2.2 Institutions and Context 2.2.2.3 The Importance of the Regional Dimension 2.2.3 Bottleneck Factors as Limiting Constraints References Chapter 3: The Distinctive Layout of Russia 3.1 Regional Layout and Spatial Heterogeneity 3.2 Political Administration and Heterogeneous Institutions 3.3 Economy and Business Climate: Between Transition and Rent Dependency 3.4 Is Russia an Entrepreneurial Society? References Chapter 4: The Institutional Framework for Entrepreneurship in Transition 4.1 Structural Economic Factors as Fundamental Prerequisites 4.2 Institutional Drivers and Determinants of Entrepreneurial Activity 4.2.1 Ensuring Property Rights 4.2.2 Criminality 4.2.3 Corruption 4.2.4 The Burden of Bureaucracy 4.2.5 Financial Capital 4.2.6 Human Capital 4.2.7 Infrastructure 4.2.8 Market Environment: The Effects of Oligarchy and the Structural Dominance of Incumbents 4.2.9 Democratization and Entrepreneurship References Chapter 5: Institutions and Entrepreneurial Activity: A Quantitative Empirical Analysis 5.1 Motivation and Objective 5.2 Data and Sample Selection 5.2.1 Dependent Variable 5.2.2 Natural Entry Rates 5.2.3 Institutional Factors 5.2.4 Structural Controls 5.2.5 Detailed Description of Variables 5.2.6 Data Imputation 5.2.7 Identification of Regional Clusters 5.2.7.1 The Heterogeneity of Russian Regions 5.2.7.2 Method 1: An Urbanization-Based Approach 5.2.7.3 Method 2: Economic Geographical Location 5.2.8 A Preliminary Descriptive Analysis 5.3 Perspective 1: A Descriptive Regression Model Approach 5.3.1 Research Design 5.3.2 Results and Discussion 5.3.2.1 Structural Economic Factors 5.3.2.2 Ensuring Property Rights 5.3.2.3 Criminality 5.3.2.4 Corruption 5.3.2.5 The Burden of Bureaucracy 5.3.2.6 Financial Capital 5.3.2.7 Human Capital 5.3.2.8 Infrastructure 5.3.2.9 Market Environment 5.3.2.10 Democratization 5.3.3 Conclusion 5.4 Perspective 2: A Geometric Clustering Approach 5.4.1 Research Design 5.4.1.1 Methodological Approach 5.4.1.2 Data Transformation 5.4.1.3 Definition of Data Subsets and Selection of Variables 5.4.1.4 Statistical Evaluation 5.4.2 Results and Discussion 5.4.3 Conclusion References Chapter 6: Conclusions 6.1 Key Contributions 6.2 Implications for Policy and Practice 6.3 Limitations and Future Research 6.4 Conclusion References Annex A A.1 The Persistency of Entry Rates A.2 Regional Clustering Based on Economic Geographical Location A.3 Summary Statistics of Regional Clusters and the Reduced Innovative Branches Sample A.4 Distribution of Entry Rates per Industry A.5 Predictability of Entry Rates Equal to Zero A.6 Linear Relationship Between Entry Rates and Standardized Variables A.7 Linear Relationship Between Entry Rates and Regions/Industries Annex B B.1 Regression Results for the Reduced Innovative Branches Sample B.2 Deviations Between EU and Post-Socialist Natural Entry Regressions B.3 Deviations Between Results Based on Linear Imputation Versus Imputation According to Bingham et al. (1998) B.4 The Control Agency Pressure: Entry Relationship Moderated by the Level of Corruption Annex C C.1 NACE Industry Sector Overview C.2 Average Training and Test Data Entry per NACE Industry Sector C.3 Variance in Mean Entry per Predictor Variable Bibliography