A study of the sexes reveals that when it
comes to starting a business, women are more likely than men to consider
individual responsibility and use business as a vehicle for social and
environmental change.
"We
found that women are 1.17 times more likely than men to create social ventures
than economic ventures, and women are 1.23 times more likely to pursue
environmental ventures than economic focused ventures," says Diana
Hechevarria, a doctoral candidate in management and entrepreneurship in the University
of Cincinnati's Carl H. Lindner College of Business.
Hechevarria,
along with co-authors Amy Ingram, Rachida Justo and Siri Terjesen, examined
data on different start-up types (economic, social and environmental) on more
than 10,000 individuals from 52 counties.
Their
research -- "Are women more likely to pursue social and environmental
entrepreneurship?" -- is published as a chapter in the book "Global
Women's Entrepreneurship Research: Diverse Settings, Questions and
Approaches" recently released by Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc.
Their
study used 2009 data from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, an annual
assessment of the entrepreneurial activity across many countries.
Ingram,
then a doctoral candidate at UC, is now assistant professor in the College of
Business and Behavioral Science at Clemson University. Terjesen is an assistant
professor of strategic management and international business at the Kelley
School of Business, Indiana University. Justo is a professor of
entrepreneurship and social entrepreneurship at the IE Business School in
Madrid.
The
research is a first to provide evidence that women entrepreneurs are more
active in social and environmental start-ups than men.
"Traditionally,
men have always been more active in start-ups, but that's because we typically
have studied economic, social and environmental start-ups all together,"
Hechevarria says.
From a
policy standpoint, government initiatives are aimed at minimizing the
entrepreneurial gender gap to increase equity and economic growth, Hechevarria
says.
"There's
a global trend towards narrowing the gender gap in entrepreneurship to create a
favorable environment for social entrepreneurship and socially responsible
venturing versus traditional conceptualizations of entrepreneurship being
solely for a profit venture," Hechevarria says. "Thus, I think we
will likely see more policy to encourage women to continue to pursue these
types of start ups."
Source:
University of Cincinnati
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