The theory of entrepreneurship, having been left fragmented across academic subdisciplines, is one of the weakest links in modern economics. A single, comprehensive theory of entrepreneurship must integrate previous discoveries, offer a broader conception of entrepreneurial rewards, and develop a fuller appreciation of how entrepreneurs confront uncertainty.
Entrepreneurship
By James A. Montanye
This
article
appeared in
the Spring 2006 issue of The Independent Review.
Business and EntrepreneurshipEconomic PolicyEconomistsEconomyFree Market EconomicsPhilosophy and ReligionPublic Choice
Other Independent Review articles by James A. Montanye | ||
Summer 2018 | Digital Revolutions in Public Finance | |
Winter 2015/16 | Does Altruism Exist?: Culture, Genes, and the Welfare of Others | |
Fall 2014 | The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, and the Birth of Right and Left | |
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