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Journal Article

The effects of entrepreneurship on income inequality in developed countries: in search of mechanisms

Empirica

Authors

  • Bode
  • E.
  • Fiedler
  • L. Sorgner
  • A.

Publication Date

forthcoming

JEL Classification

D31 D63 L26

Key Words

Income inequality

entrepreneurship

quality of entrepreneurship

creative destruction

Related Topics

Companies

Germany

Economic Policy in Germany

This paper contributes to exploring mechanisms through which entrepreneurship can reduce income inequality in developed countries. During the 2000s, higher-quality (opportunity-driven, growth-oriented, or innovative) entrepreneurship reduced inequality by diminishing the income share of the upper tail. A possible mechanism is Schumpeterian creative destruction. Entrepreneurs may have chal-lenged the market power of incumbent firms, reducing their markups and the remuneration of their owners and managers. Higher-quality entrepreneurship additionally increased the income share at the lower tail. A possible mechanism is job creation. Entrepreneurs may have offered poor, low-skilled workers additional employment opportunities. During the 2010s, the effect of opportunity entrepre-neurship on income inequality vanished, however. It neither reduced the top nor increased the bottom income shares. This hints toward a declining role of both creative destruction and job creation. Necessi-ty entrepreneurship has not affected income inequality during the entire period.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Dr. Eckhardt Bode
    Kiel Institute Researcher
  • Prof. Dr. Alina Sorgner
    Kiel Institute Fellow

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