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The implications of economic freedom and gender ideologies on women's opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship

Diana M. Hechavarría (Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, USA)
Maribel Guerrero (Global Center for Technology Transfer, School of Public Affairs, Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions, Arizona State University, Phoenix, Arizona, USA)
Siri Terjesen (College of Business, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA)
Azucena Grady (Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, USA)

International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research

ISSN: 1355-2554

Article publication date: 18 April 2024

Issue publication date: 23 August 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

This study explores the relationship between economic freedom and gender ideologies on the allocation of women’s opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship across countries. Opportunity entrepreneurship is typically understood as one’s best option for work, whereas necessity entrepreneurship describes the choice as driven by no better option for work. Specifically, we examine how economic freedom (i.e. each country’s policies that facilitate voluntary exchange) and gender ideologies (i.e. each country’s propensity for gendered separate spheres) affect the distribution of women’s opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship across countries.

Design/methodology/approach

We construct our sample by matching data from the following country-level sources: the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor’s Adult Population Survey (APS), the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom Index (EFI), the European/World Value Survey’s Integrated Values Survey (IVS) gender equality index, and other covariates from the IVS, Varieties of Democracy (V-dem) World Bank (WB) databases. Our final sample consists of 729 observations from 109 countries between 2006 and 2018. Entrepreneurial activity motivations are measured by the ratio of the percentage of women’s opportunity-driven total nascent and early-stage entrepreneurship to the percentage of female necessity-driven total nascent and early-stage entrepreneurship at the country level. Due to a first-order autoregressive process and heteroskedastic cross-sectional dependence in our panel, we estimate a fixed-effect regression with robust standard errors clustered by country.

Findings

After controlling for multiple macro-level factors, we find two interesting findings. First, economic freedom positively affects the ratio of women’s opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship. We find that the size of government, sound money, and business and credit regulations play the most important role in shaping the distribution of contextual motivations over time and between countries. However, this effect appears to benefit efficiency and innovation economies more than factor economies in our sub-sample analysis. Second, gender ideologies of political equality positively affect the ratio of women’s opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship, and this effect is most pronounced for efficiency economies.

Originality/value

This study offers one critical contribution to the entrepreneurship literature by demonstrating how economic freedom and gender ideologies shape the distribution of contextual motivation for women’s entrepreneurship cross-culturally. We answer calls to better understand the variation within women’s entrepreneurship instead of comparing women’s and men’s entrepreneurial activity. As a result, our study sheds light on how structural aspects of societies shape the allocation of women’s entrepreneurial motivations through their institutional arrangements.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper was made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation, whose views are not necessarily reflected herein, and with the support of the Cato Institute. We would like to thank Ian Vasquez for coordinating the Cato Institute’s Exploring the Role of Freedom in Human Progress Workshop, where an earlier version of this paper was presented. We would also like to thank Philip Phan for his detailed feedback on an earlier version of this paper.

Citation

Hechavarría, D.M., Guerrero, M., Terjesen, S. and Grady, A. (2024), "The implications of economic freedom and gender ideologies on women's opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship", International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, Vol. 30 No. 7, pp. 1614-1651. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-04-2023-0429

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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