scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Sameeksha Desai published in 2019"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide and test a theoretical framework with a multilevel (country-city) nested model to analyze the relationship between national business regulations (NBRs) and city level entrepreneurship.
Abstract: This article provides and tests a theoretical framework with a multilevel (country–city) nested model to analyze the relationship between national business regulations (NBRs) and city level entrepreneurship. While public interest theory predicts a positive relationship between NBR and city level entrepreneurship, public choice theory predicts the opposite, a negative relationship. Based on multilevel analysis for a matched country–city panel of 228 cities across 20 European countries for the years 2004 to 2009, the empirical evidence from panel data estimation explains how changes in NBRs influence changes in city level entrepreneurial activity over time.

83 citations


Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors surveyed the knowledge landscape on access to capital with an eye toward mechanisms to support systemic improvements in capital access for entrepreneurs in the United States and concluded with five key questions to shape a call for action.
Abstract: Entrepreneurship plays an important role in economic dynamism in the United States. Entrepreneurial ventures serve as the workhorse for the economy by contributing jobs, fueling innovation, and adding productivity. Startups in the United States less than one year old are especially important for net new job creation. Yet as the rate of startups in the United States has declined, so too has the share of jobs they add to the national economy: Per capita startup job creation in the first year declined from 7.52 jobs in 1998 to 5.27 jobs by 2017. The Kauffman Foundation recognizes the importance of entrepreneurship in the United States and seeks to understand and reduce barriers to entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurs and researchers often cite lack of access to capital as a significant barrier faced by many entrepreneurs. In order to understand the role of access to capital in entrepreneurship, identify gaps in this access, and determine possible solutions to these gaps, the Kauffman Foundation conducted extensive research on this topic in 2017 and 2018. The effort included: • A literature review on access to capital, including an analysis of previous attempts to improve access to capital; • Conversations with more than 500 financial asset owners, investors, and entrepreneurs; • Regular discussion with a working group of preeminent scholars, entrepreneurs, and investors across the U.S. This report presents the results of the research, surveying the knowledge landscape on access to capital with an eye toward mechanisms to support systemic improvements in capital access for entrepreneurs in the United States. The report concludes with five key questions to shape a call for action and to guide future thinking.

7 citations


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify some core research agendas on (AI) and entrepreneurship, categorized around implications for firms, industries, and other stakeholders, and discuss the risks of bias and the implications of AI related to big data.
Abstract: The coming Artificial Intelligence (AI) wave will be accompanied by new questions for research on entrepreneurship. This chapter identifies some core research agendas on (AI) and entrepreneurship, categorized around implications for firms, industries, and other stakeholders. AI can reshape costs for firms, which can lead to changes at the firm level around decision-making processes and capabilities, as well as implications for industry structure. I discuss some of the questions raised by these changes for other stakeholders interested in entrepreneurship, including support organizations, and for policy and governance. Finally, I discuss the risks of bias and the implications of AI related to big data.

2 citations