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LARGE PRINT EDITION More at LargePrintLiberty.com.
Entrepreneurship is a hot topic in academic, managerial, and
policy circles. Yet researchers and policymakers tend to define
entrepreneurship narrowly as business start-ups, and entrepreneurs
as young dreamers with a particular personality. In fact, as Peter
G. Klein argues, entrepreneurship is a far broader, pervasive, and
more important phenomenon in the market and in the free society.
Klein is one of the stars of the Austrian School today, with a
specialization in an area in which the Austrians make a unique
contribution: the entrepreneur's role society as the driving force
of the market. The last major work on this topic appeared in 1973
with Kirzner's own book on entrepreneurship. Klein's own book, as
Peter Lewin has written, offers "a fresh, immensely revealing
perspective." In "Capitalists and Entrepreneurs," Klein
rehabilitates and expands the classical concept of the entrepreneur
as a judgmental decision-maker, linking the capitalist-investor and
the entrepreneur-promoter. Building on foundations laid by the
Austrian school of economics, Frank Knight's theory of uncertainty,
and the modern economics of organization, Klein shows how an
entrepreneurial perspective sheds light on firm size and structure,
corporate governance and control, mergers and acquisitions,
organizational design, and a host of managerial and financial
problems. He also offers a reinterpretation of the modern Austrian
school and a critique of the "opportunity-discovery" perspective in
modern entrepreneurship studies. In a series of shorter essays he
tackles the economics of the Internet, network theory, the
socialism of the intellectual class, the financial crisis, and the
contributions of Carl Menger, F. A. Hayek, and Oliver Williamson.
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