No 167: Entrepreneurial Policymakers
Kristina Nyström
May 2011
Abstract: This paper explores the
entrepreneurial experience (and spirit) of Swedish policymakers. To
what extent have they been involved in entrepreneurial activities?
Are they planning to start any entrepreneurial activities? Are
politicians more or less entrepreneurial than their
voters? How important are entrepreneurship policies to Swedish
politicians? Are entrepreneurship policies more or less important
to policymakers compared to the voters they represent? The Members
of Parliament were asked the same questions regarding their
entrepreneurial activities as found in the Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor (GEM). The empirical results indicate that when, we analyse
the statistical significance of the differences and control for
individual characteristics, policymakers have similar experiences
and ambitions to the rest of the population when it comes to
entrepreneurial activities. Policymakers have a high potential for
becoming entrepreneurs in the future, but seem to be less
optimistic about how entrepreneurs are perceived in the Swedish
cultural context. In addition, there is a substantial discrepancy
between how policymakers and voters perceive the ease of starting
and running a business. Unlike policymakers, voters do not agree
that it is easy to start and run a business in Sweden.
KEYWORDS: Entrepreneurship policy, attitudes,
experience, culture
JEL codes: L26, L53
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