Abstract:
Entrepreneurship plays an important role in accelerating economic growth and in
the long-term economic development of a country. It promotes capital formation,
wealth creation and employment generation leading to reduction in poverty and
unemployment. Several studies have emphasised that there exists a strong
association between a country’s level of entrepreneurial activity and its economic
growth rate (Wennekers and Thurik 1999). In fact, the under development is due
to inadequate supply of entrepreneurs and is not because of the lack of natural
resources. According to Schumpeter “The entrepreneurship is essentially a
creative activity, or it is an innovative function”. His theory of innovation,
development implies carrying one of new combinations of entrepreneurship.
Traditionally, Jean-Baptiste Say is acknowledged for coining the term
‘entrepreneur’ and developing it further. In the early 18th century, Richard
Cantillon introduced the term ‘entrepreneur’ and unique risk-bearing function in
economics. In economic theory, an entrepreneur is innovator and source of
creative destruction (Schumpeter, 1934), as coordinator of production (Lucas,
1978) and as risk bearer (Kihlstrom and Laffont 1979), Entrepreneurship is
imperative for a dynamic economy as entrepreneurs are the engines of job
creation and economic growth. Entrepreneurs boost the economic growth by
introducing innovative products, services, methods, production, technologies and
processes which enhances the productivity of the enterprise and increased
competition in the market. In US, entrepreneurship has played a vital role by
creation of new enterprises and complete makeover of existing enterprises with
innovative ideas and use of modern technology. Entrepreneurship has been builtin the Indian prodigy and tradition. Renowned economist Prof. T.N. Srinivasan,
Yale University has said that, “India has been an entrepreneurial society…we had
the entrepreneurial skill but suppressed it for too long a time… and now it is
thriving.” In the pre-liberalisation period, the policies were inward looking and
geared towards the accomplishment of self-reliance. Entrepreneurship was
subdued, and availability of capital was limited. In fact, the Indian populace has
entrepreneurial competence however, the society was risk averse and majority of
individual’s preference was for secure and long-term employment, such as
government jobs followed by public sector and reputed private companies. In the
post-liberalisation-period, the level of entrepreneurship has increased
substantially with rise in entrepreneurial activity as liberalisation has brought
down the entry barriers for new firms and it kick-started the growth of
entrepreneurship. Since mid-1990s, the knowledge-intensive entrepreneurship in
sectors such as IT, telecom and biotechnology has increased significantly. In the
last two decades, the average number of companies formed per year has improved
substantially
Description:
Fourteenth Biennial Conference on Entrepreneurship/ Edited by Rajeev Sharma, Sunil Shukla, Amit Kumar Dwivedi & Ganapathi Batthini