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Is Entrepreneurship Missing in Shanghai?

Author(s)
Huang, Yasheng; Qian, Yi
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Abstract
Using a unique census dataset on all industrial firms (with more than 5 million yuan in sales), we document a phenomenon of missing entrepreneurship in Shanghai. Entrepreneurship is defined as private, new entrants in our paper. Specifically, in terms of business density, the size of employment and a host of other measures, the relative ranking of Shanghai was always near the bottom in the country. All these empirical findings took place against a backdrop of the presumably huge locational advantages of Shanghai -- the substantial human capital, rapid GDP growth, and a long and stellar -- but pre-communist -- history of entrepreneurship. We propose a hypothesis that Shanghai adopted a particularly rigorous version of industrial policy model of economic development and this industrial policy proclivity may have led to the atrophy of entrepreneurship in Shanghai.
Date issued
2008-06-30
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/65614
Publisher
Cambridge, MA; Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Series/Report no.
MIT Sloan School of Management Working Paper;4707-08
Keywords
Shanghai, Entrepreneurship

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