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No soy conformista: reassessing necessity and opportunity motivations for micro entrepreneurship in Lima, Peru
Duffy, Daniel
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/31152
Description
- Title
- No soy conformista: reassessing necessity and opportunity motivations for micro entrepreneurship in Lima, Peru
- Author(s)
- Duffy, Daniel
- Issue Date
- 2012-05-22T00:31:23Z
- Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
- Orta, Andrew
- Department of Study
- Latin American & Carib Studies
- Discipline
- Latin American Studies
- Degree Granting Institution
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Degree Name
- M.A.
- Degree Level
- Thesis
- Keyword(s)
- Microenterprise
- Entrepreneurship
- Necessity
- Opportunity
- Lima
- Peru
- Abstract
- Increasingly, in the field of entrepreneurial studies, venture creation is dichotomously conceived as an activity willfully undertaken to seize a business opportunity or reluctantly performed as a last resort in the face of a weak and/or inaccessible labor market. This schema purports that an entrepreneur’s disposition is fixed at the moment of business start-up, and is indicative of future performance. Opportunity types are more likely to reap substantial profits, expand, hire more workers, and ultimately contribute, on a macro-level, to higher rates of economic growth. Necessity types are subsistence-oriented, survival is the goal, and thus their contributions to national wealth are negligible. My findings, derived from open-ended, unstructured interviews with twenty-seven migrant micro entrepreneurs in Lima, Peru, complicate the “necessity-opportunity model”, and its implications. Participants’ narratives demonstrate that motivations co-exist, and tend to shift as firms and their founder’s develop; cultural and social dimensions are often just as influential as economic forces in inducing venture creation; human, social, and financial capital are the more relevant variables determining a firm’s growth potential. I also delve into entrepreneurial theory and use historical analysis to challenge the necessity-opportunity model’s theoretical foundations. I conclude by demonstrating how policy recommendations based in the dichotomy are misguided, and how they threaten to undermine the socio-economic advances made by Andean empresarios over the last two decades.
- Graduation Semester
- 2012-05
- Permalink
- http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31152
- Copyright and License Information
- Copyright 2012 Daniel Duffy
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