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Why has the United States economy successfully moved beyond its chief competitors? This collection suggests that at least some of the answers to the pattern of divergent development can be found in the role of the entrepreneur. By examining the process that new firms and entrepreneurs play in the economy, the essays in this volume make a fundamental contribution to our understanding of the macroeconomy. The public policy implications of this process are clear. Countries that encourage entrepreneurship and free entry will have better macroeconomic performance than those that retard it.
In this book questions about definitions and demarcations of sport
science are discussed. Not the least the many normative ideas of
sport as good or as bad are problematized in relation to the
academic field. These ideas permeate sport science in ways that are
not seen in other academic fields like history, sociology or law.
In addition, if and if so, in what ways sport science influence
social science in general. Does sport science bring new questions
in relation to issues like "what makes a society possible" or "what
is a human being"? This book was published as a special issue of
Sport in Society.
In this book questions about definitions and demarcations of sport
science are discussed. Not the least the many normative ideas of
sport as good or as bad are problematized in relation to the
academic field. These ideas permeate sport science in ways that are
not seen in other academic fields like history, sociology or law.
In addition, if and if so, in what ways sport science influence
social science in general. Does sport science bring new questions
in relation to issues like "what makes a society possible" or "what
is a human being"? This book was published as a special issue of
Sport in Society.
This book was originally published in 1999. At this time, the US
economy had recently restructured itself, moving away from an
industrial economy towards one based on information, while the
European Union and Japan were left to worry about rising government
deficits, inflexible businesses, persistent unemployment, and
workers inadequately trained for the information age. Why did the
US economy move beyond its chief competitors? This collection
suggests that at least some of the answers to the pattern of
divergent development can be found in the role of the entrepreneur.
By examining the process that entrepreneurs play in the economy,
the essays in this volume make a fundamental contribution to our
understanding of the macroeconomy. Each chapter clarifies the role
of entrepreneur in economic theory, the function of small and
medium-size enterprises that they found and build and the impact of
the innovations introduced on employment, productivity, and
economic growth.
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