390 likes | 560 Views
“Entrepreneurial Challenge”. Prof. Anne Flynn 04/14/2005. Traditional Irish Greeting. A chairde. Tá áthus orm bheith anseo libh agus mo bhuiochas libh as an fáilte a thug sibh dom. Entrepreneurship is?.
E N D
“Entrepreneurial Challenge” Prof. Anne Flynn 04/14/2005
Traditional Irish Greeting A chairde. Tá áthus orm bheith anseo libh agus mo bhuiochas libh as an fáilte a thug sibh dom.
Entrepreneurship is? • One of the cornerstones of a modern, fully developed economy and the lifeblood of thriving local communities. • An important contributor to economic growth, employment, innovation, and competitiveness.
Structure • Global Assessment [GEM] • Entrepreneurial Activity: Ireland, Europe, US • Entrepreneurship in Europe • Entrepreneurial Challenges in Ireland • Closing Remarks
Global Assessment • The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) research program - is a global assessment of the national level of entrepreneurial activity. • Initiated in 1999 with 10 countries,the fifth assessment was completed in 2003 with 41 countries. www.gemconsortium.org
GEM Program Objectives • Are there national differences in entrepreneurial activity? • National consequences of entrepreneurial activity [scope, job creation, growth]? • Why are some countries more entrepreneurial than others? • What can be done to enhance entrepreneurial activity?
GEM Research Activities • Adult population surveys • Random sample of adults, 2,000 or more • Grass roots entrepreneurial activity • National expert interviews • National teams, [18-70 per country] • National expert questionnaires • Follows personal interview • Standardised national data • IMF, World Bank, UN, OECD, etc
Measures • Total Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) • provides a measure of those active in starting a new business [start up process & owning/managing a new firm 3-42 months] • Firm Entrepreneurial Activity [FEA] • an indicator of entrepreneurial activity among established firms • firms provide new innovations, not just replicate existing goods or services
What is National Entrepreneurship? • People Creating New Firms • Start-up phase, before firm operational • Young firm, up to 3.5 yrs old • Entrepreneurship among existing firms • Produce market innovation, Focus on growth • National Infrastructure focuses on adaptation • Coordinated effort, Collaboration among major sectors, Government, research, education, financial
Overall National Entrepreneurial ActivityTwo Dimensional Classification
Opportunity vs. Necessity Are you involved • To take advantage of a business opportunity or • Because you have no better choices for work? Willing volunteers or draftees?
Entrepreneurial Activity • US (TEA) rate 11.9% in 2003, 7th highest. • Ireland (TEA) rate 8.1%, fore in Europe, most entrepreneurial country in EU. • 76% of Americans opportunity vs. 85% of Irish entrepreneurs • US (FEA) rate of 2.4%, the 10th highest, Ireland (FEA) rate 1.6%
Entrepreneurship and Job Creation • US - 70% [employ at least 1 person] • Ireland - 84% [employ 5 or fewer] third only entrepreneur employed. Most expect they will remain small. • High growth aspirations [20+ staff in 5 years time] [Ireland 16%, US 20%, Europe 5.9% ]
Entrepreneurship and Population Profile • US: Most active [25-34] years, TEA 15.7% men vs. 8.2% women, specialized professional, technological, or business degree [highest TEA 17.8% & opportunity driven 13.3%] • Island of Ireland: Most active [35-44] years, 12.5%male vs. women (3.7%), high level of education.
Entrepreneurship and Cultural Values • The strength of support for entrepreneurship among the general adult population within Ireland is stronger than in the US. • Ireland vs. US • Good career choice [66% - 63%] • High degree of status [76% - 64%] • Positive media coverage [84% - 64%]
Entrepreneurship and Financing • Av. Cost of Start-up [US $29,600 / €26,200) Europe $53,800 / €47,600] • US - highest prevalence rate of informal investors with 5 /100 adults having invested in someone else's business during the previous 3 years • Ireland - Low level of informal investment (2.6%) are active business angels, compared to 4.9% in the US.
Ireland Small size of home market Early stage finance Fear of failure Rate of commercialization of research Skills and experience Physical infrastructure United States Reduce gender gap [1.9 men for every woman] Lack of financial capabilities - acquiring latest technology Stronger IPR laws to enhance R&D transfers Build sustainable financing venues Shortcomings that Inhibit Entrepreneurial Activity
Entrepreneurship in Europe • SME’s backbone of European economy • Conditions in Europe vs. US • Green Paper on Entrepreneurship • How to produce more entrepreneurs? • How to get more firms to grow? • Action Plan: 5 policy areas: entrepreneurial mindsets, incentives for entrepreneurs, competitiveness & growth, access to finance and red tape
Entrepreneurial Mindsets • “Promote awareness of the entrepreneurial spirit by presenting best practice models and fostering entrepreneurial attitudes and skills among young people” • Educational Policy • Entrepreneurs are not a homogenous group
Incentives for Entrepreneurs • Fairer balance between risk & reward • Tackle the negative effects of business failures • Facilitate the transfer of companies and amend social security systems for entrepreneurs. • Entrepreneurship gap between Europe & US is widening.
Incentives for Entrepreneurs • Why do fewer Europeans have what it takes?(Eurobarometer 01/2005) • Balancing the risks: [A regular income, Job stability,Fear of failure] • Rewards [EU - greater independence & self-fulfillment, US - creating one's own working environment] • Similar perceived obstacles • Good management = Success
Competitiveness & Growth • Promoteaccess to support & management training for entrepreneurs from all backgrounds, especially women and ethnic minorities. • View immigration as an opportunity for stronger entrepreneurship (US) • Exchange of Good Practice
Access to Finance • Improve the availability of venture capital, business angel finance and investments by private individuals (US) • Continue efforts to mobilize capital to support young, risk-taking businesses.
Red Tape • Reduce & simplify administrative barriers & regulatory burdens • World Bank "Doing Business Survey 2005” [ease of starting a business] • EU busy pushing reforms, still lag US • US [5 days & 5 administrative steps to start a business] vs. EU [36 days, 7.5 steps]
Entrepreneurial Challenges in Ireland • 172,000 small businesses • 60% of total turnover • 66% of employment • 50% of private sector employment • 80% service sector • 16,000 new enterprises are created per annum
Enterprise Driven Society • Less employment in large companies & public sector • Size of the domestic economy • Government foster an entrepreneurial climate & enterprise culture • Small Firms Association of Ireland - major impediments and challenges facing the enterprise led sector& appropriate actions
Competitiveness • Ireland’s competitive position is now in a tailspin [4th position 2000 - 30th today!] • An expensive & less attractive place to do business. [min wage 22% higher, insurance costs risen 100% in 2 years, retail space Dublin (capital city) most expensive in the world! red tape adds 4% to product cost] • SME’s - [non-pay costs 23.7% 2002 - 2004] • “You must create wealth before you can redistribute it.”
Skilled Workforce & Knowledge Driven Economy • In a knowledge-based economy • Well-supported process of life long learning, training & up-skilling programs • Intellectual property system is open and inviting • Focus on technology transfer, licensing, the importance of 'change' or 'new ideas’ rather than 'R&D'
Infrastructure • Current gridlock is threatening enterprise formation & development • Specialized body assessing planning applications & reprioritizing projects • Liberalization & deregulation within the energy market • Strive to have the "best in class" telecommunications infrastructure • “Environmental accreditation”
Government Support • Comprehensive fiscal approach to enterprise • Retaining low corporation tax rates (12.5%) • Reducing inflation below 2% • Standard rate of VAT to 17.5% • No increases in labor costs
Regulatory Burden • “Simplicity needs to be rediscovered as a virtue.” • Comply - An owner manager would have to read almost one million words per annum & complete forms running to over 500 feet in length. • SME’s cite legislation as the most significant problem for their business. • Cost impact analysis on businesses
Encouraging Business Start Ups • Develop an" Enterprise Culture” • Remove barriers to entrepreneurship • Availability of pre and start up seed capital • Increase number of female entrepreneurs
ICT & Training • Maximize the potential of ICT for every small business & speed up the roll-out of broadband digital access • Training objectives - driven by business needs & Increase management competency among small firms • Enterprise courses
Value of Sectors • “Value Added" economy • Barriers to trade within the Eurozone “Create a business environment which makes it possible to sustain an economic and social shift to a high skill, higher value added competitive environment.” • “Ahead of the Curve: Ireland's Place in the Global Economy.”
Closing Remarks • Strong positive contributors and the shortcomings that inhibit entrepreneurial activity • Shared challenges in fostering entrepreneurship “Go raibh maith agaibh go léir.”