From static to processual analysis: how insights from Austrian economics can advance research on public policy and entrepreneurship
Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public Policy
ISSN: 2045-2101
Article publication date: 12 October 2022
Issue publication date: 8 March 2023
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to illustrate how research on the intersection of public policy and entrepreneurship has been bounded by its static approach and how a processual analysis based on Austrian economics can advance the understanding of the subject matter.
Design/methodology/approach
Rooted in the Austrian school of economics, this conceptual paper adopts a processual approach in order to unveil the effects that public policy exerts upon entrepreneurship and the market process.
Findings
The authors argue that by interfering with the market process, public policy detrimentally alters what otherwise would have been the market's natural evolution reflecting acting individuals' subjective valuations. It causes progressively self-reinforcing market distortions which result in comparatively lower levels of both capital accumulation and societal wealth.
Research limitations/implications
The paper urges future research to rethink public policy's effects on entrepreneurship and to explore them more comprehensively, utilizing market process analysis.
Practical implications
This research suggests that public policy can never be neutral but necessarily comes with distortive and often detrimental effects. That is, public policy comes at the innate expense of hampering the entrepreneurial process. Thus, new public policies and those already in place should be carefully reconsidered in light of these effects.
Originality/value
This paper offers a novel take on how to best understand the effects public policy has on entrepreneurship and the market process.
Keywords
Citation
Bylund, P.L., Packard, M.D. and Rapp, D.J. (2023), "From static to processual analysis: how insights from Austrian economics can advance research on public policy and entrepreneurship", Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public Policy, Vol. 12 No. 1, pp. 32-48. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEPP-03-2022-0041
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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