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What do we know about entry

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TLDR
A brief survey of recent empirical work on entry can be found in this paper, which summarizes what is generally understood about what drives entry, and about the effects that entry has on markets.
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This article is published in International Journal of Industrial Organization.The article was published on 1995-12-01. It has received 2034 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Stylized fact.

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The Promise of Entrepreneurship as a Field of Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw upon previous research conducted in the different social science disciplines and applied fields of business to create a conceptual framework for the field of entrepreneurship, and predict a set of outcomes not explained or predicted by conceptual frameworks already in existence in other fields.
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Sectoral systems of innovation and production

TL;DR: The concept of sectoral system of innovation and production as mentioned in this paper provides a multidimensional, integrated and dynamic view of sectors, where agents carry out market and non-market interactions for the creation, production and sale of those products.
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The Knowledge Spillover Theory of Entrepreneurship

TL;DR: This article developed a knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship, which argued that knowledge created endogenously results in knowledge spillovers, which allow entrepreneurs to identify and exploit opportunities, and then use this knowledge to increase economic growth.
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The Trouble With Overconfidence

TL;DR: Overprecision appears to be more persistent than either of the other 2 types of overconfidence, but its presence reduces the magnitude of both overestimation and overplacement.
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Posted Content

Sources, Procedures, and Microeconomic Effects of Innovation

TL;DR: In this paper, Arcangeli, Paul David, Frank Engelman, Christopher Freeman, Massimo Moggi, Richard Nelson, Luigi Orsenigo, Nathan Rosenberg, Michele Salvati, G. N. von Tunzelman, two anonymous referees, and the participants at the meeting of the Committee on Distribution, Growth, and Technical Progress of the Italian National Research Council (CNR), Rome, November 16, 1985, have helped with various redraftings.
Book

Selection and the evolution of industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a theory of selection with incomplete information that is consistent with these and other findings, and give rise to entry, growth, and exit behavior that agrees, broadly, with the evidence.
Book

Innovation and Small Firms

TL;DR: Innovation and Small Firms as discussed by the authors provides a rich empirical analysis of the increased importance of small firms in generating technological innovations and their growing contribution to the U.S. economy.
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The Growth and Failure of U. S. Manufacturing Plants

TL;DR: This article examined the patterns of postentry employment growth and failure for over 200,000 plants that entered the U. S. manufacturing sector in the 1967-1977 period and found that plant failure rates decline with size and age as do the growth rates of nonfailing plants.
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On the Relationship Between Firm Size and Export Intensity

Abstract: Export marketing literature supports the view that firm size is positively related to export intensity. Although the empirical findings have been mixed, a number of theoretical arguments are used to support this proposition, i.e., international marketing economies of scale, limited managerial and financial resources of small firms, decisionmaker's risk perception. Based on a large survey of the Italian manufacturing industry, the article falsifies the proposition and challenges some widely held assumptions in export marketing literature.