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Examining economic complexity as a holistic innovation system effect

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:35 authored by Kai Du, Allan O'Connor
The relationship between entrepreneurship and economic growth has remained somewhat contentious. While it is almost universally acknowledged that entrepreneurship and particularly knowledge-intensive entrepreneurship has apparent and important links to economic growth, studies to elaborate exactly how each of these factors influences economic growth return inconsistent findings. However, the measure of economic growth we suggest is too broad as an outcome metric to account for the sector of the economy that most directly contributes to the dynamics of economic growth. In this paper, we take a more nuanced approach to consider in what way and whether increasing economic complexity is related to the efficiency with which a country produces growth. We argue from a holistic innovation system (HIS) perspective that the combination of both knowledge-intensive and broader market–led business innovation will more rapidly improve the productivity levels of nations by utilising the diversity of knowledge and business resources available to that country. To test this hypothesis, we employ a dynamic version of the two-stage data envelopment analysis. We conclude that the increased economic diversity measured by the change in economic complexity can be treated as a much more refined outcome effect of a country’s HIS.

History

Journal

Small Business Economics

Volume

56

Issue

1

Start page

237

End page

257

Total pages

21

Publisher

Springer

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Former Identifier

2006094462

Esploro creation date

2021-04-27