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Magnus Henrekson

Researcher at Research Institute of Industrial Economics

Publications -  274
Citations -  14093

Magnus Henrekson is an academic researcher from Research Institute of Industrial Economics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entrepreneurship & Incentive. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 261 publications receiving 13346 citations. Previous affiliations of Magnus Henrekson include Stockholm School of Economics & Union Institute & University.

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Gazelles as job creators: a survey and interpretation

TL;DR: This article conducted a meta-analysis of the empirical evidence regarding whether net employment growth rather is generated by a few small and young firms, and found that small firms account for a disproportionately large share of employment growth.
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Growth Effects of Government Expenditure and Taxation in Rich Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, an econometric panel study is conducted on a sample of rich countries covering the 1970-95 period, and extended extreme bounds analyses are reported based on a regression model that tackles a number of economic issues.
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Gazelles as job creators: a survey and interpretation of the evidence

TL;DR: This article conducted a meta-analysis of the empirical evidence regarding whether net employment growth rather is generated by a few rapidly growing firms that are not necessarily small and young, and found that Gazelles are outstanding job creators.
Posted Content

Testing the Female Underperformance Hypothesis

TL;DR: The authors conducted a comprehensive test on a large Swedish sample of 4200 entrepreneurs with 1 to 20 employees in all sectors of the economy and found that female entrepreneurs tend to underperform relative to men when the data is examined at the most aggregate level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth Effects of Government Expenditure and Taxation in Rich Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, an econometric panel study is conducted on a sample of rich countries covering the 1970-95 period, and extended extreme bounds analyses are reported based on a regression model that tackles a number of economic issues.