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Can entrepreneurship serve as a pathway out of poverty? Are the poor able to create ventures that can improve their economic circumstances and enhance their lives? Poverty, Disadvantage and the Promise of Enterprise: A Capabilities Perspective argue that “it depends”. To understand the poverty and entrepreneurship interface, we must first understand poverty. Using a lens of disadvantage theory and the capabilities framework, the book explores the implications of poverty’s complex, multi-dimensional nature when one is trying to start and grow a business. Four key liabilities directly impact the opportunities these individuals are able to recognize, the types of ventures they create, how the businesses perform, and the impacts on the well-being of the entrepreneur. Because of these liabilities, these ventures tend to fall into what the authors call the commodity trap, where they struggle with low sales volumes and marginal profits. However, the trap is avoidable, and, with the right kinds of support, the performance of these ventures can be meaningfully improved. Key design elements of a successful intervention approach, together with an alternative perspective on the roles of community-based entrepreneurial ecosystems and public policy, are introduced. Emphasis is also placed on the critical roles of faith, hustle, and the fears of both failure and success.
Michael H. Morris is professor of entrepreneurship & social innovation at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Development.Susana C. Santos is associate professor of entrepreneurship in the Jim Moran College of Entrepreneurship at Florida State University.
ContentsPrefacePart I: Entrepreneurship as Human EmpowermentChapter One: The Promise of Entrepreneurship: An IHD Perspective Chapter Two: Disadvantage, Capability and Entrepreneurship Chapter Three: Types of Ventures and the Poverty Entrepreneur Chapter Four: The Underlying Nature and Importance of Ventures of the PoorPart II: Understanding the Poverty ContextChapter Five: The Liabilities of Poorness Chapter Six: Opportunity Horizons and Poverty Chapter Seven: Rethinking the Entrepreneurial MindsetPart III: From Fragility to SustainabilityChapter Eight: The Commodity Trap and Venture Fragility Chapter Nine: Identity, Fear of Failure and Fear of SuccessChapter Ten: The Role of Faith in Poverty EntrepreneurshipPart IV: Fostering an Entrepreneurial RevolutionChapter Eleven: Interventions, Contraventions and a Pathway to SustainabilityChapter Twelve: Institutional Voids and the Role of Community Chapter Thirteen: A New Policy Paradigm: Fostering Capabilities and Well-being About the Authors
This comprehensive examination offers insights and a deeper understanding of the relationships between entrepreneurship, poverty, and human development.