2020
DOI: 10.1177/1042258720929891
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Entrepreneurial Workaround Practices in Severe Institutional Voids: Evidence From Kenya

Abstract: Entrepreneurs in developing economies try to cope with weak or absent formal institutions—often referred to as “institutional voids”—by relying extensively on intermediary organizations such as business incubators and development organizations or informal institutions such as political, kinship, or family relationships. However, in many African countries, intermediary support is limited and informal institutions are also unreliable, adding risks and costs to doing business and increasing the severity of instit… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 139 publications
(280 reference statements)
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“…Engaging in entrepreneurial activities is a highly uncertain endeavor and requires the ability to administer risks (Knight, 1921). This is a weightier challenge in developing countries where trusted institutions are present only weakly, where the challenges in setting up economic activities are intense, and where reliance on spatially concentrated enclaves connecting individuals based on socioeconomic and racial basis is salient (Sydow, Cannatelli, Giudici & Molteni, 2020). Our core premise is that being members of a minority enclave could be an asset during pre-crisis; however, with the pandemic affecting all members of the locally concentrated enclave members, it could be a liability and thereby limit resilience in form of a decline in work hours.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Engaging in entrepreneurial activities is a highly uncertain endeavor and requires the ability to administer risks (Knight, 1921). This is a weightier challenge in developing countries where trusted institutions are present only weakly, where the challenges in setting up economic activities are intense, and where reliance on spatially concentrated enclaves connecting individuals based on socioeconomic and racial basis is salient (Sydow, Cannatelli, Giudici & Molteni, 2020). Our core premise is that being members of a minority enclave could be an asset during pre-crisis; however, with the pandemic affecting all members of the locally concentrated enclave members, it could be a liability and thereby limit resilience in form of a decline in work hours.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, AlphaEl, a Scandinavian SE, donates the majority of its profit to other organizations that are committed to addressing various social problems (Olofsson et al, 2018). An SE’s financing work toward other SEs also takes the form of offering service contracts or sub-contracts to supplier SEs, making purchase guarantees from supplier SEs, and giving an interest-free and extended credit facility to customer SEs (Meyskens et al, 2010; Spieth et al, 2019; Sydow et al, 2020; Wilson and Post, 2013).…”
Section: Scaling Social Impact Through Ecosystem Growth Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, AlphaEl, a Scandinavian SE, donates the majority of its profit to other organizations that are committed to addressing various social problems (Olofsson et al, 2018). A SE's financing work towards other SEs also takes the form of offering service contracts or sub-contracts to supplier SEs, making purchase guarantees from supplier SEs, and giving an interest-free and extended credit facility to customer SEs (Wilson and Post, 2013;Meyskens et al, 2010;Spieth et al, 2019;Sydow et al, 2020).…”
Section: Financing Workmentioning
confidence: 99%