On the origins of entrepreneurship: Evidence from sibling correlations

Theodor Vladasel*, Matthew J. Lindquist, Joeri Sol, Mirjam van Praag

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Despite the consensus that entrepreneurship runs in the family, we lack evidence regarding the total importance of family and community background, as well as the relative importance of different background influences that affect entrepreneurship. We draw on human capital formation theories to argue that families and communities provide a salient context for the development of individual entrepreneurial skills and preferences, beyond the existing focus on parental entrepreneurship. We posit that early influences are more important than later influences and propose a hierarchy of family influences, whereby genes have the largest explanatory power, followed by parental entrepreneurship, neighborhoods, and parental resources, and finally by parental immigration, family structure, and sibling peers. Finally, we argue that the higher human and financial capital intensity of incorporated relative to unincorporated entrepreneurship predictably alters the hierarchy of family influences, as does gender. Sibling correlations estimated on Swedish register data confirm our hypotheses.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number106017
    Pages (from-to)1-21
    Number of pages21
    JournalJournal of Business Venturing
    Volume36
    Issue number5
    Early online date12 Mar 2020
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2021

    Bibliographical note

    Funding Information:
    We thank the editor (Justin W. Webb), the two anonymous reviewers, seminar and workshop participants at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Bocconi University, Imperial College Business School, Copenhagen Business School, Stockholm University, Universidad Carlos III Madrid, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics, DRUID, the 3rd CEPR Workshop on Entrepreneurship Economics, the 24th CCC Doctoral Conference, the 2017 Academy of Management Meeting, the Spring Meeting of Young Economists (Lisbon), the Applied Economics Meeting (Sevilla), the 8th SEI Doctoral Consortium, as well as Anders Bj?rklund, Saul Estrin, April Franco, Markus J?ntti, Laura Rosendahl-Huber, and Henry Sauermann for many insightful comments. Lindquist gratefully acknowledges funding from the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsr?det 2017-01941).

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2020 The Authors

    Funding

    We thank the editor (Justin W. Webb), the two anonymous reviewers, seminar and workshop participants at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Bocconi University, Imperial College Business School, Copenhagen Business School, Stockholm University, Universidad Carlos III Madrid, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics, DRUID, the 3rd CEPR Workshop on Entrepreneurship Economics, the 24th CCC Doctoral Conference, the 2017 Academy of Management Meeting, the Spring Meeting of Young Economists (Lisbon), the Applied Economics Meeting (Sevilla), the 8th SEI Doctoral Consortium, as well as Anders Bj?rklund, Saul Estrin, April Franco, Markus J?ntti, Laura Rosendahl-Huber, and Henry Sauermann for many insightful comments. Lindquist gratefully acknowledges funding from the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsr?det 2017-01941).

    FundersFunder number
    Barcelona Graduate School of Economics
    Imperial College Business School
    Copenhagen Business School
    Universitat Pompeu Fabra
    Vetenskapsrådet2017-01941
    Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
    Università Bocconi
    Stockholms Universitet

      Keywords

      • Entrepreneurship
      • Family background
      • Self-employment
      • Sibling correlations

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