|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
early economic thinkers and classic works such as Cantillon (1755),
Knight (1921), and Kirzner (1973). The paper opens by explaining
how uncertainty and thus entrepreneurship disappeared from
microeconomic theory as it became increasingly formalized (and
stylized). It then goes on to bring the entrepreneur and
entrepreneurial decision-making back into economic theory by
focusing on the interrelationships among actors, knowledge, and
perceived economic opportunities using a resource-based framework.
The third paper in this section (Chapter 4) is by Foss and Klein,
"Entrepreneurship and the Economic Theory of the Firm: Any Gains
from Trade?" Foss and Klein strongly link theories of the firm to
entrepreneurship, arguing a fundamental and intrinsic connection
between the two. They, like Mahoney and Michael, explain how
entrepreneurship became less important in economic models as the
general equilibrium model became dominant. Foss and Klein ask: Does
the entrepreneur need a firm? They focus on the judgment of the
entrepreneur and suggest that this judgment is exercised through
asset ownership and starting a firm. Foss and Klein further argue
that it is through this notion of judgment that heterogeneous
assets combine to meet future wants.
early economic thinkers and classic works such as Cantillon (1755),
Knight (1921), and Kirzner (1973). The paper opens by explaining
how uncertainty and thus entrepreneurship disappeared from
microeconomic theory as it became increasingly formalized (and
stylized). It then goes on to bring the entrepreneur and
entrepreneurial decision-making back into economic theory by
focusing on the interrelationships among actors, knowledge, and
perceived economic opportunities using a resource-based framework.
The third paper in this section (Chapter 4) is by Foss and Klein,
"Entrepreneurship and the Economic Theory of the Firm: Any Gains
from Trade?" Foss and Klein strongly link theories of the firm to
entrepreneurship, arguing a fundamental and intrinsic connection
between the two. They, like Mahoney and Michael, explain how
entrepreneurship became less important in economic models as the
general equilibrium model became dominant. Foss and Klein ask: Does
the entrepreneur need a firm? They focus on the judgment of the
entrepreneur and suggest that this judgment is exercised through
asset ownership and starting a firm. Foss and Klein further argue
that it is through this notion of judgment that heterogeneous
assets combine to meet future wants.
|
You may like...
Atmosfire
Jan Braai
Hardcover
R590
R425
Discovery Miles 4 250
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.