Open AccessPosted Content
Competition and Entrepreneurship
6.2K
TL;DR: Kirzner as discussed by the authors argues that the assumption of perfect knowledge is unrealistic and argues that every market participant is a potential entrepreneur who can exploit a situation, which depends on a lack of perfect information among the market participants.
read more
Abstract: Kirzner, writing from a neo-Austrian economic perspective that is inherently dynamic with an emphasis on action over time, offers a critique of the prevailing positivistic, value freedom of orthodox microeconomics and price theory, focusing on what he believes is its unrealistic emphasis on static equilibrium analysis. Kirzner criticizes the methodology of Robbinsian equililbrium analysis in which a competitive market is a situation in which buyers and sellers have perfect knowledge and in which decision-making is mechanical and its solutions given. This analysis, according to Kirzner, eliminates all consideration of the competitive process and of entrepreneurship (which is synonymous, for him, with competitive activity); the assumption of perfect knowledge is unrealistic. He offers a full elaboration of the Mises-Hayek view of entrepreneurship and competition as a process based on von Mises' idea of "human action" rather than Marshall's idea of economizing. Kirzner sees the entrepreneur as always alert to information and propelling the system forward by seeking out price discrepancies as opportunities for profit. This process depends not on impulses from technology or genius; rather every market participant is a potential entrepreneur who can exploit a situation, which depends on a lack of perfect knowledge among the market participants. Entrepreneurial activity is always competitive; and competitive activity is always entrepreneurial. Kirzner is thus also a critique of the Schumpeterian view of entrepreneurship as disrupter of equilibrium; rather the entrepreneur removes disequilibrium in a short-run movement to an equilibrium position. A Kirznerian entrepreneur is a decision-maker whose entire role arises from alertness to unnoticed opportunities or knowledge about market data. Within the context of entrepreneurial activity, he offers a neo-Austrian redefinition of the concept of monopoly and competition. Since for Kirzner entrepreneurship involves no element of resource ownership, monopoly is defined as the impact of input ownership on the competitive process, and not the shape of the demand curve facing a firm. A monopoly position can be won by an alert entrepreneur. In the light of his theory of competition, Kirzner provides a new theoretical place for advertising and selling costs. Advertising, which promotes and calls attention to product differentiation, is the "weapon" of competition, which allows competitive-entrepreneurial adjustments in the type of products placed in the market in disequilibrium. Kirzner's revaluation of advertising is thus opposed to the idea of advertising as a social waste. Kirzner also offers a new conception of economic welfare based on the "coordination-of-knowledge-and-actions" instead of the orthodox "allocation of social resources" standard. (TNM)
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Posted Content
Customizing Clusters: On the Role of Western Multinational Corporations in the Formation of Science and Engineering Clusters in Emerging Economies
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of foreign MNCs in the formation of science and engineering (S&E) clusters is investigated and it is proposed that pioneer MNC companies promote the initial development of S&E clusters by customizing local institutions and business practices in accordance with their sourcing needs and based on their experience in other local business contexts, including their home country.
45
Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Institutions
Erik Stam,Bart Nooteboom +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the nature of entrepreneurship and its relation to innovation along a cycle in which exploration and exploration follow upon each other and place the roles of entrepreneurship in innovation policy within this cycle of innovation.
Entrepreneurship, transaction costs, and resource attributes
Kirsten Foss,Nicolai J. Foss +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a sketch of the mechanisms that link entrepreneurship, property rights, and transaction costs in a resource-based setting, contributing further to the attempt to take the RBV in a more dynamic direction.
Accepting the unknowables of entrepreneurship and overcoming philosophical obstacles to scientific progress
TL;DR: In this paper, Per Davidsson questions the potential of the actualization perspective of entrepreneurship to move the field forward, arguing that opportunities do not exist as actualized and empirically undiscovered entities, but as profit propensities that may actualize when properly exploited.
45
Political Heterarchy and Dispersed Entrepreneurship in the MNC
Christopher Williams,Soo Hee Lee +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed and tested a new perspective on dispersed entrepreneurship within the multinational corporation (MNC), and found that a tolerance for local initiative (subsidiary level), subsidiary manager proactivity (individual level), and political heterarchy directly influence initiative diffusion.
45