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Immersed in Coleman's bathtub: multilevel dynamics driving new venture survival in emerging markets

Jennifer Franczak (Department of Organization Theory and Management, Pepperdine University, Malibu, California, USA)
Robert J. Pidduck (Department of Management, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia, USA)
Stephen E. Lanivich (Department of Management, The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA)
Jintong Tang (Department of Management, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 9 June 2023

Issue publication date: 4 July 2023

320

Abstract

Purpose

The authors probe the relationships between country institutional support for entrepreneurship and new venture survival. Specifically, the authors unpack the nuanced influences of entrepreneurs' perceived environmental uncertainty and their subsequent entrepreneurial behavioral profiles and how this particularly bolsters venture survival in contexts with underdeveloped institutions for entrepreneurship.

Design/methodology/approach

Coleman (1990) ‘bathtub’ framework is applied to develop a model and propositions surrounding how and when emerging market entrepreneur's perceptions of their countries institutional support toward entrepreneurship can ultimately enhance new venture survival.

Findings

Entrepreneurs' interpretations of regulatory, cognitive and normative institutional support for private enterprise helps them embrace uncertainties more accurately reflective of “on the ground” realities and stimulates constructive entrepreneurial behaviors. These are critical for increasing survival prospects in characteristically turbulent, emerging market contexts that typically lack reliable formal resources for cultivating nascent ventures.

Practical implications

This paper has implications for international policymakers seeking to stimulate and sustain entrepreneurial ventures in emerging markets. The authors shed light on the practical importance of understanding the social realities and interpretations of entrepreneurs in a given country relating to their actual perceptions of support for venturing—cautioning a tendency for outsiders to over-rely on aggregated econometric indices and various national ‘doing business' rankings.

Originality/value

This study is the first to create a conceptual framework on the mechanisms of how entrepreneurs in emerging economies affect new venture survival. Drawing on Coleman's bathtub (1990), the authors develop propositional arguments for a multilevel sequential framework that considers how developing economies' country institutional profiles (CIP) influence entrepreneurs' perceptions of environmental uncertainty. Subsequently, this cultivates associated entrepreneurial behavior profiles, which ultimately enhance (inhibit) venture survival rates. Further, the authors discuss the boundary conditions of this regarding how the national culture serves to moderate each of these key relationships in both positive and negative ways.

Keywords

Citation

Franczak, J., Pidduck, R.J., Lanivich, S.E. and Tang, J. (2023), "Immersed in Coleman's bathtub: multilevel dynamics driving new venture survival in emerging markets", Management Decision, Vol. 61 No. 7, pp. 1857-1887. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-03-2022-0308

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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