Institutions and entrepreneurship development: High-technology indigenous firms in China and Taiwan

被引:0
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作者
Cheng-Hua Tzeng
Paul W. Beamish
Shih-Fen Chen
机构
[1] Fudan University,School of Management, Department of Business Administration
[2] The University of Western Ontario,Canada Research Chair in International Management, Richard Ivey School of Business
[3] The University of Western Ontario,Richard Ivey School of Business
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Institutional environments; Entrepreneurship development; High-technology firms in China and Taiwan;
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摘要
This study takes an inductive approach in analyzing the roles played by the state, the market, and the social sector in indigenous entrepreneurship development. Data collected from six high-technology companies in China and Taiwan serve to broaden our prior knowledge on how the three institutions work collectively in nourishing indigenous firms at three stages of entrepreneurship development. At the start-up stage, the state influences a firm’s entrepreneurial motivation by creating contexts, providing necessary financial resources, and setting up policy hurdles. At the growth stage, the social sector facilitates technology transfer to indigenous firms and protects them from lawsuits filed by multinational corporations. At the mature stage, the market allows multinational corporations to either enhance or destroy the technological capabilities of local firms. These findings provide strong theoretical and policy implications.
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页码:453 / 481
页数:28
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