The Entrepreneur: Real and Imagined
Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Murray Rothbard were the main architects of the distinctly Austrian theory of production as it exists today. All three conceived the entrepreneurial function
Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Murray Rothbard were the main architects of the distinctly Austrian theory of production as it exists today. All three conceived the entrepreneurial function
While corporate income taxation is a major issue in the debate over international finance, economic theory has no clear stance on who bears its burden.
This paper revisits the concept of entrepreneurship, which is frequently neglected in mainstream economics, and discusses the importance of defining and isolating this concept in the context of large, publicly held companies.
Professor Spengler refers to Richard Cantillon as the first of the modems. Professor Tarascio presents him from a current perspective.
Peter Klein focuses here on the financial-market entrepreneur — what Rothbard (1962, 1985) calls the capitalist-entrepreneur — to outline some features of an Austrian theory of corporate governance
Mainstream growth theory focuses on the role of inputs and technology, but inputs and technology cannot produce growth without an environment that fosters entrepreneurship. I believe that the application of mainstream growth theory has often been harmful to economic growth because the mainstream theory ignores the market process.
The purpose of this paper is to extend Kirzner’s theory by explicitly introducing the role of space in entrepreneurial alertness and the coordination of markets.
Entrepreneurs exploit market opportunities and innovate to achieve or maintain strategic advantage over their competitors.In the absence of government regulation,
Peter Klein addresses the frequent criticism that private investors and entrepreneurs have too short of a time horizon.