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Published in: The Annals of Regional Science 1/2021

12-01-2021 | Original Paper

Ecosystems of entrepreneurship: configurations and critical dimensions

Authors: André Cherubini Alves, Bruno Brandão Fischer, Nicholas S. Vonortas

Published in: The Annals of Regional Science | Issue 1/2021

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Abstract

Entrepreneurial ecosystems research has largely focused on the profile of a handful of successful locations. This has prevented a deeper understanding of the mechanisms that shape entrepreneurial activity across the geographical space. Our goals in this research are (1) to identify the critical dimensions of entrepreneurial ecosystems, and (2) to assess whether successful ecosystems rely on heterogeneous configurations. Through fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis, we address this issue with data from the State of São Paulo, Brazil. Findings generate a typological hierarchy of attributes, where the range of critical dimensions seems to be much more restricted than previously argued, and alternative configurations appear to lead to similar outcomes. A first pivotal path toward establishing a thriving ecosystem is fundamentally based on the conditions of the knowledge Infrastructure. A second approach combines elements of the socioeconomic system with the knowledge environment. Although some elements are ubiquitous, contributing attributes differ across distinct configurations, suggesting some level of heterogeneity in the dominant dimensions of entrepreneurial ecosystems. Such evidence contributes to the debate on entrepreneurial ecosystems’ dimensions and elements, offering exploratory insights on alternative ways to promote an environment conducive to knowledge-intensive ventures.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
While our analytical framework does not include an express mention to policy for local-level ecosystems, manifestations of institutional initiatives can be perceived in a distributed manner in most components of the model that are related both to the knowledge infrastructure and the socioeconomic system.
 
2
To complement this perspective, we plot cities in a map (Sect. 6) allowing to infer potential spillovers associated with EE.
 
3
This follows the notion that innovative entrepreneurial activity is not necessarily connected to newly founded firms (e.g., Spigel 2017; Henrekson and Sanandaji 2019; Kirzner 1997; Baumol 1996), but rather on the Schumpeterian tradition defining entrepreneurs as those who “exploit market opportunity through technical and/or organizational innovation” (Schumpeter 1965).
 
4
Ultimately, the definition of inputs and outputs will be arbitrary to some extent, as the relationships in ecosystems are complex and involve high degrees of endogeneity (Spigel 2017).
 
5
For both universities and habitats, as we deal with a pooled sample, there is the risk of a given university, incubator and/or science park springing up or closing down throughout the period. For these cases, our analysis dealt with the percentage of observed years in which the municipality had an active entrepreneurial habitat or research university.
 
6
The complete truth table is available from the authors upon request.
 
7
“A counterfactual case is a substantively relevant combination of causal conditions that nevertheless does not exist empirically” (Ragin 2008, p.9). Counterfactuals involve all possible combinations that could lead to an outcome to which data are unavailable or are redundant as an explanatory assertation. ‘Easy’ counterfactuals are those cases where available data exist, but are redundant as a causal explanation. ‘Difficult’ counterfactuals come from those cases that cannot be observed given the lack of available data.
 
8
It should be pointed out, however, that the statistical associations between research universities and other explanatory variables are moderate (Habitats and Tertiary Enrollment) or weak (Knowledge-Intensive Jobs, Diversity)—see "Appendix 3" for the detailed correlation matrix. Hence, deterministic perceptions on the role of these academic institutions as potential policy solutions to engender entrepreneurial ecosystems are not recommended.
 
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Metadata
Title
Ecosystems of entrepreneurship: configurations and critical dimensions
Authors
André Cherubini Alves
Bruno Brandão Fischer
Nicholas S. Vonortas
Publication date
12-01-2021
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
The Annals of Regional Science / Issue 1/2021
Print ISSN: 0570-1864
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0592
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00168-020-01041-y

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