Waubonsee Community College

Is entrepreneurship dead?, the truth about startups in America, Scott A. Shane

Label
Is entrepreneurship dead?, the truth about startups in America, Scott A. Shane
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-244) and index
Illustrations
illustrationscharts
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Is entrepreneurship dead?
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1002666586
Responsibility statement
Scott A. Shane
Sub title
the truth about startups in America
Summary
"It's become an article of faith that American entrepreneurship is in trouble. The problems are many: lack of capital, too few entrepreneurial immigrants, excessive regulation, an aging population, slowing population growth, and rising student debt. But while experts across the country debate the causes and propose solutions, Scott Shane explains that the data just do not fit. Dismantling each of the most widely accepted theories in turn, he persuasively demonstrates that--while an evolving market is changing the nature of most startups--entrepreneurship is actually alive and well. Shane reveals how the number of incorporated startups is rising, fewer startups are failing, and the number of businesses backed by investors is increasing. The overall picture is positive. Exhaustively researched and compellingly told, this book will be read and discussed for years to come"--Publisher's description
Table Of Contents
Something is happening, but we don't know what it is -- The good news : most measures of entrepreneurship have improved -- Entrepreneurial earnings are on the rise -- Riding high -- The implications of fewer employer startups -- It's not a lack of capital -- Don't blame the regulators -- High taxes are not the cause -- It's not a lack of immigration -- An aging population isn't the reason -- Slowing population growth isn't the explanation -- Rising student debt is not the cause -- Don't blame a loss of moxie -- Employees have become too expensive - Chains have replaced independent employers -- The story the data are telling
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources