The entrepreneur the economic function of free entreprise
Otros Autores: | , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London, England ; Hoboken, New Jersey :
ISTE
2016.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Colección: | Smart innovation (Series) ;
8. THEi Wiley ebooks. |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009849137006719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 From Term to Concept: the Entrepreneur and his Economic Function
- 1.1. Etymological and conceptual bases of the entrepreneur
- 1.2. The gradual recognition of the role of entrepreneurship
- 1.3. From a society of salary-earners to one of entrepreneurs?
- 1.4. Current definitions of entrepreneurship, or the institutional recognition of the entrepreneur
- 1.5. The plural entrepreneur
- ch. 2 Quantifying Entrepreneurship, Understanding the Entrepreneurial Role
- 2.1. Basic principles: the OECD's model
- 2.2. The main entrepreneurship indicators
- 2.2.1. Eurostat indicators
- 2.2.2. OECD and Eurostat indicators
- 2.2.3. Global Entrepreneurship Monitor indicators
- 2.2.4. World Bank indicators and the business climate
- 2.2.5. The official quantification of business creation in France: the Business Creation Observatory
- 2.3. The European Union's inclusive policy to promote entrepreneurship
- 2.4. Supporting entrepreneurship in developing countries: the ambitions of the United Nations (UN) and the United States
- ch. 3 Classical Economics of the Entrepreneur
- 3.1. Richard Cantillon: an economic agent with uncertain income
- 3.2. Anne Robert Jacques Turgot: the "progress" of the capitalist entrepreneur
- 3.3. Francois Quesnay, the manufacturing and commercial entrepreneur belongs to the sterile class
- 3.4. Pietro Verri and Cesare Beccaria, the inspiration for Jean-Baptiste Say?
- 3.5. Adam Smith: sympathy for initiative, but distrust of project creators
- 3.6. Jean-Baptiste Say: intermediary between scholar and laborer
- 3.7. Karl Marx, entrepreneur or officer of capital
- 3.8. Jean-Gustave Courcelle Seneuil, economist-entrepreneur or entrepreneur-economist?
- 3.9. The marginalists' faux pas or Leon Walrus's ghost entrepreneur
- 3.10. Alfred Marshall, division of industry into entrepreneurial and managerial businesses
- 3.11. Werner Sombart and Mux Weber, the entrepreneur or the spirit of capitalism
- 3.12. Joseph A. Schumpeter: the entrepreneur's "new combinations of production factors"
- 3.13. John Maynard Keynes: the animal spirit of the entrepreneur
- 3.14. From uncertainty to ignorance: Ludwig von Mises, Franck Knight and Friedrich Hayek
- 3.15. Creating or detecting opportunities?
- ch. 4 Contemporary Theories of the Entrepreneur
- 4.1. From entrepreneur to industrial economy
- 4.2. Ronald Coase, or the entrepreneur on the frontier of industrial economics
- 4.3. William Baumol, the entrepreneur and the Prince of Denmark
- 4.4. Mark Casson: entrepreneurship
- an alternative to employment?
- 4.5. Scott Shane or the genetic theory of the entrepreneur
- 4.6. Entrepreneur, innovation, territory and social networks
- 4.7. Mark Granovetter
- from social integration to weighted networks
- 4.8. Towards an evolutionist theory of the entrepreneur, or the heterogeneity of entrepreneurship
- ch. 5 Towards a Socioeconomics of the Entrepreneur: An Overview
- 5.1. The 13 keywords of the economics of the entrepreneur
- 5.2. On the entrepreneur's personality: the player and the system
- 5.3. Resource potential and the social integration of the entrepreneur
- 5.4. Overall picture of the theory of the entrepreneur.