Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- ENTREPRENEURSHIP, GROWTH, AND PUBLIC POLICY
- 1 Introduction: Why Entrepreneurship Matters
- PART I THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN INNOVATION
- PART II LINKING ENTREPRENEURSHIP TO GROWTH
- PART III POLICY
- 10 Entreprenomics
- 11 The Bayh-Dole Act and High-Technology Entrepreneurship in the United States during the 1980s and 1990s
- 12 Academic Entrepreneurship in Europe
- 13 Creating an Entrepreneurial Economy
- 14 “Entrepreneurial Capitalism” in Capitalist Development
- Index
- References
14 - “Entrepreneurial Capitalism” in Capitalist Development
Toward a Synthesis of Capitalist Development and the “Economy as a Whole”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- ENTREPRENEURSHIP, GROWTH, AND PUBLIC POLICY
- 1 Introduction: Why Entrepreneurship Matters
- PART I THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN INNOVATION
- PART II LINKING ENTREPRENEURSHIP TO GROWTH
- PART III POLICY
- 10 Entreprenomics
- 11 The Bayh-Dole Act and High-Technology Entrepreneurship in the United States during the 1980s and 1990s
- 12 Academic Entrepreneurship in Europe
- 13 Creating an Entrepreneurial Economy
- 14 “Entrepreneurial Capitalism” in Capitalist Development
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
The concepts that Schumpeter developed have experienced a renaissance in the last few decades of the twentieth century. This was in large part due to the technological revolution, especially in the United States, which rediscovered the importance of innovation and entrepreneurship, the process by which new opportunities are discovered and implemented (Theory of Economic Development (1911 [1934], hereafter TED). However, despite the renaissance of his thought, Schumpeter has remained hostage to Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1950 [1942], hereafter CSD), with its emphasis on the large corporation and the state. Therefore no acceptable theory of the economy as a whole has emerged.
CSD is in fact a theory of the economy as a whole. The reason that Schumpeter never returned to the “lost” seventh chapter is that at the time he was writing CSD in the early 1940s the institutions of economic development were on a track fundamentally different from that of today. This was the world of “managerial capitalism,” the transition from capitalism to socialism, where the entrepreneurial function as well as the entrepreneurial class would disappear. The large corporation, by taking over the entrepreneurial function, not only makes the entrepreneur obsolete, but also undermines the sociological and ideological functions of capitalist society.
This is so obvious that I am surprised that scholars even debate this point (Acs, 1984). An interesting question remains, however: How would Schumpeter close the model of capitalist development, given what has happened to the institutional structure of society since his death?
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- Information
- Entrepreneurship, Growth, and Public Policy , pp. 319 - 338Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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