Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

Calling Baumol: What telephones can tell us about the allocation of entrepreneurial talent in the face of radical institutional changes

Autoren

  • Sorgner
  • A.
  • Wyrwich
  • M.

Erscheinungsdatum

DOI

10.1016/j.jbusvent.2022.106246

JEL Classification

L26 P20 P31

Schlagworte

Achtsamkeit

Institutionelle Bedingungen

Mehr zum Thema

Arbeitsmarkt

Unternehmen

Deutschland

In his seminal contribution, Baumol (1990) proposes that the direction of entrepreneurial effort towards its productive (e.g., start-up activity) or unproductive (e.g., rent-seeking) use in a society depends on institutions or the “rules of the game”. We focus on an important micro-foundation of Baumol's theory namely that certain individuals change the direction of entrepreneurial efforts with institutional change. Our research contrasts with previous work on the role of institutions, which mostly focuses on the aggregate macro-level, while not observing individual behavior. We analyze who decides to start a venture in East Germany after the fall of the Berlin Wall and find that many individuals who demonstrated commitment to the anti-entrepreneurial communist regime in the GDR were active in launching new ventures soon after German re-unification. We argue that commitment to communism among post-communist entrepreneurs reflects rent-seeking. Once institutions change radically, entrepreneurial efforts are directed towards start-up activity. We rely on the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP) that includes information on whether East German respondents had a telephone before German re-unification, which was one of the most sought-after rewards for commitment to the regime. We find that telephone owners had a higher propensity of becoming successful firm founders. Telephone owners were also more likely to have an entrepreneurship-prone personality profile and value orientation. Our results confirm Baumol's theory and suggest that alertness to entrepreneurial arbitrage opportunities is guiding the redirection of entrepreneurial effort in the face of drastic institutional change.

Kiel Institut Expertinnen und Experten

  • Prof. Dr. Alina Sorgner
    Kiel Institute Researcher

Mehr Publikationen

Themendossiers

  • Blick über das Deck eines Containerschiffs

    Internationaler Handel

  • Demonstranten gegen den Krieg in der Ukraine

    Krieg gegen die Ukraine

  • Innenaufnahme der Kuppel des Reichstags

    Wirtschaftspolitik in Deutschland

Forschungszentren

  • Außenhandel