Open AccessJournal Article
Implementation of International Experience in Support of Youth Innovative Entrepreneurship in the Union State
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TLDR
The characteristics of different groups of entrepreneurs also include demographic characteristics, such as ethnicity, gender, age, and demographic characteristics of entrepreneurs as discussed by the authors, and the characteristics of these groups are related to the scale and scope of business, property rights, management schemes, the origin of capital, the nature of technological and financial chains in which their enterprises are embedded.Abstract:
Aim of the study: When considering entrepreneurship as a function, small and large entrepreneurs are singled out. On one side are the founders of small firms, often retaining the position of private owners. Their businesses face tough problems of survival, freedom of decision-making is very limited and depends on larger market participants. Innovation, they often cannot afford because of the limitations and lack of resources. Being sandwiched between three major forces - the state, large capital and organized wage labor, this group often simply does not have the ability to be focused on innovation and social change, it remains to try to adhere to the status quo. Methodology: Economic sociologists complement the functional approach with a structural approach, highlighting entrepreneurs as a set of social groups. And in the construction of samples for empirical research, entrepreneurs usually do not include those who implement the entrepreneurial function, since their selection before the study is often difficult, but the creators and leaders of new, primarily non-governmental organizations. Conclusion: This set of entrepreneurs is extremely heterogeneous. Fundamental differences between groups of entrepreneurs are related to the scale and scope of business, property rights, management schemes, the origin of capital, the nature of technological and financial chains in which their enterprises are embedded. The characteristics of different groups of entrepreneurs also include demographic characteristics, such as ethnicity, gender, age.read more
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References
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a theory aimed at advancing scholarly research in social entrepreneurship by highlighting the key trade-off between value creation and value appropriation and explaining when situations of simultaneous market and government failure may arise.
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Social Entrepreneurship: Action Grounded in Needs, Opportunities and/or Perceived Necessities?
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Supporting self-employment and small-scale entrepreneurship: potential programs to improve livelihoods for vulnerable workers
TL;DR: The authors provides a review of the profiles of the subsistence entrepreneurs and their constraints, and the landscape of current entrepreneurship programs and the evidence on impacts, and discusses the potential role of public policies for the livelihoods of subsistence entrepreneurs.
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Youth Employment in Africa: New Evidence and Policies from Swaziland
TL;DR: In this article, a multinomial logit regression analysis is carried out to analyze the socio-economic drivers of the unfavorable youth labor market outcomes on the supply side, since many of the factors that can unlock the employment potential of the Swazi youth are on the demand side of the labor market, examining the barriers to job creation and youth entrepreneurship.
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Unearthing entrepreneurial opportunities among youth vendors and hawkers: challenges and strategies
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored entrepreneurial opportunities among youth engaged in vending and hawking on the streets of Accra, Ghana, and ascertained challenges faced and strategies adopted to address them.
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