Section 1: Introduction.-Chapter 1. Emerging Economies: Muddling through to Development.- Section 2: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem.- Chapter 2. An Empirical Analysis of the Singapore Entrepreneurship Ecosystem: A Case Study for BRIC Economies to Ponder.- Chapter 3. The Impact of Ethnicity on Entrepreneurship: A Global Review and Lessons for Nigeria.- Chapter 4. Economic Implications of Intellectual Property Rights in Evolving Markets.- Chapter 5. Factors Affecting Capital Structure of Indian Venture Capital backed Growth Firms.- Chapter 6. ridging the Cross Cultural Transformational LI (Distance Measure) at Huawei Technology India Pvt Ltd.- Section 3: Social Networks for Entrepreneurship.- Chapter 7. How Do Entrepreneurs Benefit from their Informal Networks?.- Chapter 8. Opportunity Identification in International Entrepreneurship: The Role of Human and Social Capital.- Chapter 9. Symbiotic Venture and Social Capital: The Effects of Market Orientation on Small Entrepreneur Firms in China.- Chapter 10. Social Fluidity Mapping System A Way to Reduce Social Stigma in Business Failures.- Section 4: Sustainable Entrepreneurship.- Chapter 11. Green Entrepreneurship in India: Global Evaluation, Needs Analysis and Drivers for Growth.- Chapter 12. Green Awareness by Corporates and Entrepreneurs in India: A Case Study of an Indian City.- Chapter 13. Social Entrepreneurship: Building Sustainability through Socially Relevant Business Models.- Section 5: Micro-Entrepreneurship.- Chapter 14. Driving Factors for Entrepreneurship: A Case Study of Immigrant, Ethnic and Religious Minority Entrepreneurs.- Chapter 15. Entrepreneurial Success and Life Satisfaction among Women Micro-Entrepreneurs.
Mathew J Manimala is a Professor of Organization Behaviour and Chairperson-OBHRM Area at the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIMB), India. Prior to joining IIMB, he served as Senior Member of Faculty and Chairman, Human Resources Area, at the Administrative Staff College of India (ASCI), Hyderabad. At IIMB he has worked closely with the N S Raghavan Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning (NSRCEL) primarily to build the research competencies of the Centre during its early years, when he served as the Jamuna Raghavan Chair Professor of Entrepreneurship for two terms and as the Chairperson of NSRCEL for one term. He is a Senior Enterprise Fellow of the School of Entrepreneurship and Business (SEB), University of Essex, UK, and a member of the International Advisory Board of the Institute of Management Innovation at Kinki University, Osaka, Japan. Currently he is involved in setting up the International Consortium for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research (ICIER) in collaboration with European and BRIC countries institutions. Professor Manimala has received several academic honours including a Certificate of Distinction for Outstanding Research in the Field of NewEnterprise Development (Heizer Award) from the Academy of Management. He has been awarded research fellowships by prestigious international agencies such as the European Foundation for Management Development (for a research fellowship at Manchester Business School, Manchester, UK: 1990-91) and the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute (for a research fellowship at the University of Calgary, Canada: 1998-99). In July 2011 he was honoured by CMO-Asia with the “Best Professor of Human Resource Management” Award at the 2nd Asia’s Best B-School Award function held at Singapore, and in February 2013 a similar award was conferred on him by ET NOW in association with B-School Affaire and the Word Education Congress. Professor Manimala has done extensive research in the area of Entrepreneurship. His work on Entrepreneurial Heuristics is acclaimed by the community of researchers (including the Academy of Management) as a pioneering work in the field, wherein he has also perfected and used a novel methodology called the ‘Case-survey method’. He has published more than 50 research papers and articles in refereed international journals and presented papers mostly in international conferences, and is the Editor of South Asian Journal of Management
Dr. Kishinchand Poornima Wasdani is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Management Studies, SaintGits College of Engineering, Kottayam, India. She obtained her PhD in Management from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India. Her doctoral work was on “the opportunity recognition potential of pre-, early- and late-stage entrepreneurs”. Since then, she has been active in researching and publishing in the area of entrepreneurship, and has a few research papers in refereed journals and case-studies in textbooks and edited volumes. Besides, she is also involved in entrepreneurship training as well as academic conferences, and was one of the organizers of the ICIER-BRIC International Conference, 2011 – selected papers from which form the content of this volume. Poornima is also the Associate Editor of South Asian Journal of Management.
Economic development is a priority for all nation-states, whether developing or developed. In recent times, a few among the developing nations – often referred to as the emerging economies – have attracted the world’s attention because of their fast pace of economic growth. While the similarities among these nations (for example the BRICS) in the pattern of their economic growth are highlighted and discussed, the differences are often glossed over. This book, therefore, attempts to present the diverse ways in which entrepreneurship is facilitated in emerging economies, through a compilation of research papers from six different countries (India, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Nigeria and New Zealand) belonging to the class of emerging economies. The papers included in this book cover a variety of topics related to the creation and management of an entrepreneurial ecosystem, such as intercultural interactions, IPR issues, government policies for SMEs, social entrepreneurship, opportunity identification, green entrepreneurship, employee entrepreneurship, symbiotic ventures and social capital, social fluidity mapping for reducing failure stigma, green awareness in the corporate world and among entrepreneurs, venture capital for growth, immigrant entrepreneurs, entrepreneurial success and life satisfaction, among others. The contributions are supported by an introductory chapter that provides an integrative framework by unifying the diverse patterns of economic development in the different countries under various institutional inadequacies as a process of “muddling-through to development”, necessitated by the non-systematic development of the ecosystem for new venture creation. This book is indeed a must-read for those interested in understanding the process of entrepreneurship and economic development in emerging economies.