“…This analysis is not the first to analyze the role of culture in determining entrepreneurial activity. Prior research has analyzed the correlation between culture and entrepreneurship in a range of countries, focusing on the interrelationships among religion, education, risk-taking behavior, institutional, geographic and macroeconomic factors, innovation and creativity, openness to change and self-efficacy, the stigma of business failure and individualism values (Ajide and Osinubi, 2020;Altinay, 2008;Escand on-Barbosa et al, 2019;Bayraktar, 2016;Calza et al, 2020;Çelikkol et al, 2019;Chukwuma-Nwuba, 2018;Danish et al, 2019;Estrada-Cruz et al, 2019;Idjaz et al, 2012;Lee et al, 2020;Ostapenko, 2017;Thurik and Dejardin, 2011;Williams and Vorley, 2015). Using a similar approach, Marc en (2014) finds that the entrepreneurial decisions of second-generation immigrants in the United States depend on the entrepreneurial rates in their countries of origin; Butler and Herring (1991) show evidence of the intergenerational transmission of entrepreneurship; and Stevenson (2000) suggests that individuals living in societies that favor entrepreneurship are more likely to become entrepreneurs in the future.…”