Zhu Bin a and Lü Peng b
a School of Sociology and Population Studies, Renmin University of China
b Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
Abstract
During the past forty years of reform and opening up, China’s private economy has made remarkable strides. This paper introduces start-up organizational processes into the study of elite mobility in emerging markets, exploring the relationship between the social origins of entrepreneurs and their entrepreneurial outcomes. Our research finds that the initial scale, growth rate and current size of enterprises established by elite entrepreneurs are larger than those of grassroots entrepreneurs. With the deepening of economic reform and the growth of the private economy, the social origins of large business owners generally tend to be elitist and the scale advantage of the enterprises set up by elite entrepreneurs, especially endogenous or inside-track entrepreneurs, is ever more striking. The expansion of such enterprises’ superior position is mainly due to their initial advantages of scale; after the start-up period, the advantage conferred by their pace of growth does not increase synchronously. In order to promote the further development of the private economy and release its innovative potential, it is necessary to give full play to the government’s function of regulating market operations and correcting market failure, and thus actively creating a good business environment.
Keywords: entrepreneurs, enterprise growth, enterprise scale, market transition
友情链接: 中国社会科学院官方网站 | 中国社会科学网
网站备案号:京公网安备11010502030146号 工信部:京ICP备11013869号
中国社会科学杂志社版权所有 未经允许不得转载使用
总编辑邮箱:zzszbj@126.com 本网联系方式:010-85886809 地址:北京市朝阳区光华路15号院1号楼11-12层 邮编:100026
>