2022:2023 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Global Report

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Global Entrepreneurship

Monitor
2022/2023 Global Report
Adapting to a “New Normal”
AUTHORS
GEM Global
Professor Stephen Hill, DSc (Lead Author)
Aileen Ionescu-Somers, PhD
Professor Alicia Coduras, PhD
GEM Chile
Professor Maribel Guerrero, PhD, Arizona State University, USA, and Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile
GEM Israel
Professor Emeritus Ehud Menipaz, P.Eng, Ben Gurion University
GEM Morocco
Fatima Boutaleb, PhD, Hassan II University of Casablanca
GEM Poland
Professor Przemysław Zbierowski, PhD, University of Economics in Katowice
GEM Turkey
Professor Thomas Schøtt, PhD, University of Agder, Norway
GEM UK
Professor Sreevas Sahasranamam, PhD, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
GEM USA
Professor Jeffrey Shay, PhD, Babson College
In collaboration with GEM National Teams, the GEM Global Data Team — Francis Carmona and Alicia
Coduras — produced the Economy Profiles in Part 2 and all figures and tables, while Kevin Anselmo
produced the Entrepreneur Profiles used throughout the report.

Although GEM data were used in the preparation of this report, the interpretation and use of the data are
the sole responsibility of the authors.

Published by the Global Entrepreneurship Research Association, London Business School,


Regents Park, London NW1 4SA, UK
Please cite as: GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) (2023). Global Entrepreneurship Monitor
2022/2023 Global Report: Adapting to a “New Normal”. London: GEM.

Cover image:
iStock.com/marrio31
Design and production:
Witchwood Production House http://www.witchwoodhouse.com
BBR Design https://bbrdesign.co.uk

© 2023 The authors and the Global Entrepreneurship Research Association (GERA)

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Contents

GEM Policy Influence: Examples from 2. The Social and Cultural


the UK, Guatemala and the USA  6 Foundations of Entrepreneurship  37
2.1 The influence of society and culture  37

Key GEM Definitions and Abbreviations  8 2.2 The recognition of opportunities  38


2.3 Can I start a business?  43
2.4 Investing in someone else’s business  46
Acknowledgements  10
2.5 Conclusions and policy implications  49

Foreword  11 3. Levels of Entrepreneurial Activity


Across the Globe in 2022  50

About GEM  13 3.1 Measuring entrepreneurial activity  50


3.2 Where is entrepreneurial activity highest?  50
3.3 How has the pandemic affected levels of
Executive Summary  15 entrepreneurship?  55
Key findings  15 3.4 In what sectors are new businesses started —
Conclusions  19 and does this matter?  59
Report format  20 3.5 Conclusions and policy implications  60

Key Thoughts for Policymakers from 4. Entrepreneurial Motivations and


the GEM 2022/2023 Global Report Responsibilities  61
Authors  21 4.1 Introduction: a world of change  61
4.2 Changing the world  61
4.3 Why start a business?  62
4.4 Becoming a digital world  66
Part 1  Analysis  25 4.5 Social and environmental responsibilities  68
4.6 Entrepreneurship and the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)  70
1. What Is GEM?  26
4.7 Conclusions and policy implications  72
1.1 Brief introduction  26
1.2 The global context  26
1.3 Why entrepreneurship matters  27
1.4 The GEM methodology  29
1.5 GEM 2022 participating economies  32
1.6 The impact of the pandemic on household
incomes  34
1.7 Conclusion  36

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 1


5. The Impacts of Entrepreneurial Part 2  National Contexts
Activity  73
and Economy Profiles  103
5.1 What determines entrepreneurial impacts?  73
5.2 Entrepreneurship and the United Nations
8. The Context for Entrepreneurship  105
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)  73
5.3 Entrepreneurship and employment 8.1 Introduction  105
expectations  76 8.2 Defining and assessing context  105
5.4 Entrepreneurship and innovation  79 8.3 Contemporary Entrepreneurial Framework
5.5 Entrepreneurship and competitiveness35  81 Conditions (EFCs)  107
5.6 Entrepreneurship and international revenue  83 8.4 The National Entrepreneurship Context
Index (NECI)  108
5.7 Conclusions and policy implications  84
8.5 The evolution of NECI  110
8.6 The entrepreneurial environment and
6. All Kinds of Entrepreneurs  86 innovation  111
6.1 Introduction  86 8.7 Conclusions and policy implications  112
6.2 The entrepreneurial gender gap  87
6.3 The entrepreneurial age gap  90 Economy Profiles  114
6.4 The entrepreneurial graduation gap  91
6.5 Conclusions and policy implications  92

7. Exiting a Business  94
Part 3  Appendix Tables 217
7.1 Introduction  94
7.2 Exit rates and Total early-stage GEM Indicators  218
Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)  94
7.3 The pandemic and exit rates  97
7.4 Exit and continuation  98 GEM Global Sponsor  250
7.5 Reasons for exit  99
7.6 Conclusions and policy implications  100 Report Sponsors  251

2 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Figures
Figure 1.1 The GEM Conceptual Framework  28

Figure 1.2 The entrepreneurial process and GEM indicators  30

Figure 1.3 The impact of the pandemic on household income  34

Figure 2.1 Knowing someone who has started a business in the last two years (% adults)  38

Figure 2.2 In the next six months, there will be good opportunities to start a business in my area
(% adults agree)  40

Figure 2.3 In the next six months there will be good opportunities to start a business in my area
(figures for 2019 and 2022, 37 economies; % adults agree)  41

Figure 2.4 In my country, it is easy to start a business (% adults agree)  41

Figure 2.5 I have the knowledge, skills and experience to start my own business (% adults agree)  43

Figure 2.6 You would not start a business for fear it might fail (% of those agreeing there are
good opportunities locally)  44

Figure 2.7 Are you expecting to start a business in the next three years? (% adults responding yes)  46

Figure 2.8 Informal investors (% adults)  47

Figure 2.9 Median amount invested ($US) by those investing in someone else’s new business  47

Figure 3.1 Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) and Established Business Ownership
(EBO) (both % adults)  51

Figure 3.2 Levels of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and GDP per capita  52

Figure 3.3 Levels of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and the UN Human Development
Index  54

Figure 3.4 Levels of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity each year since 2019 (32
economies participating in GEM for all four years; % adults)  55

Figure 3.5 The percentage of those starting or running a new business who think doing so is
more difficult (includes both somewhat and much more difficult) than one year ago
(% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  56

Figure 3.6 The percentage of those starting a new business who agree that the pandemic has
led to new opportunities they wish to pursue, and the proportion of those running
established businesses who are pursuing such opportunities (% Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Activity and % Established Business Ownership)  57

Figure 3.7 Business services and consumer services as a percentage of Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Activity (% TEA)  59

Figure 4.1 The proportion of those starting or running a new business and reporting lower
growth expectations than a year ago (% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  62

Figure 4.2 Expectations of lower growth for new entrepreneurs: comparison between 2021 and
2022 (38 economies; % Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity).  63

Figure 4.3 Agreement with motivations “to make a difference in the world” and “to build great
wealth or very high income” (% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  64

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 3


Figure 4.4 Agreement with motivations “to continue a family tradition” and “to earn a living
because jobs are scarce” (% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  64
Figure 4.5 The proportion of those starting or running a new business, or running an
established business, who expect to use more digital technologies to sell their
products or services in the next six months (% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial
Activity and % Established Business Ownership).  66
Figure 4.6 “When making decisions about the future of my business, I always consider social
implications” (agree, % Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and % Established
Business Ownership)  69
Figure 4.7 “When making decisions about the future of my business, I always consider
environmental implications” (agree, % Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and
% Established Business Ownership)  69
Figure 4.8 Are you aware of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals? (% Total
early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and % Established Business Ownership)  70
Figure 5.1 The percentage of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) agreeing that they
always take environmental implication into account in 2022, minus that percentage
in 2021  74
Figure 5.2 Job growth expectations among early-stage entrepreneurs expecting to employ 0, 1–5
or 6 or more people in five years’ time (% adults)  76
Figure 5.3 The percentage of those starting or running a new business and expecting to employ
no additional people in five years’ time (% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  77
Figure 5.4 The proportion of adults starting a new business with products or services that were
new to their area, new to their country, or new to the world  79
Figure 5.5 The proportion of adults starting a new business with any technologies or procedures
that are either new to their area, new to their country or new to the world  80
Figure 5.6 The level of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) and those within this that
will have only customers in their local area, only within their country and those that
will have international customers (% adults)  81
Figure 5.7 The percentage of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) anticipating 25% or
more of revenue from outside their country  83
Figure 6.1 Levels of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) by gender (% women, % men) 87
Figure 6.2 Levels of Established Business Ownership (EBO) by gender (% women, % men)  88
Figure 6.3 Relative gender gaps for new businesses (female % TEA/male % TEA) and for
established businesses (female % EBO/male % EBO)  89
Figure 6.4 The relative entrepreneurial gender gap (female Total early-stage Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA)/male TEA), 2022 and 2019  89
Figure 6.5 The level of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) for adults aged 18–34 and
for those aged 35–64 (% of adults in each age group)  91
Figure 6.6 The level of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) for graduates and for
non-graduates (% of adults in each age group)  92
Figure 7.1 The level of business exits in the previous 12 months (% adults)  95
Figure 7.2 Scatterplot of exit rates and Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) rates
(both % adults)  96
Figure 7.3 The ratio of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) to business exits (both
% adults)  96

4 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Figure 7.4 The percentage of adults exiting a business, 2019–2022  97
Figure 7.5 The percentage of adults exiting a business and reporting that the business did, or
did not, continue  98
Figure 7.6 Reasons for exiting a business: negative, COVID-related and positive (all % adults)  99
Figure 7.7 The percentage of business exits attributed to the pandemic (% exits), 2020–2022  100
Figure 8.1 Number of Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions (from 13) scored as sufficient or
better (score ≥5.0) (51 economies, 2022)  108
Figure 8.2 National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) 2022  109
Figure 8.3 Scatterplot of National Entrepreneurial Context Index and Global Innovation Index
scores (both for 2022)  111

Tables
Table 1.1 Economies in GEM 2022, categorized by income group (GDP/cap)  33
Table 3.1 Number of economies in each category by income group  51
Table 8.1 National Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions: Summary  106
Table 8.2 Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions: highest and lowest scores by income level  107
Table A1 Impact of pandemic on household income in past year (% of adults aged 18–64 )  220
Table A2 Entrepreneurial activity (% of adults aged 18–64)  224
Table A3 Public attitudes and perceptions (% of adults aged 18–64 somewhat or strongly agree) 226
Table A4 Attitudes and perceptions of entrepreneurs: % of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA) and % of Established Business Ownership (EBO)  230
Table A5 Entrepreneurial activity by age, gender and education  234
Table A6 Sector distribution of new entrepreneurial activity
(% of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)  238
Table A7 Business exits, and reason for exit (positive, negative [non-COVID] and COVID-
related), % of adults aged 18–64  240
Table A8 Entrepreneurial expectations and scope (% of adults aged 18–64)  242
Table A9 The motivation to start a business (% of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity
who somewhat or strongly agree)  246
Table A10 National Entrepreneurship Context Index and number of Entrepreneurial Framework
Conditions (EFCs) scored as sufficient or better (score ≥5)  248

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 5


GEM Policy Influence:
Examples from
the UK, Guatemala
and the USA
“GEM research has certainly influenced policymakers’
discussions about entrepreneurship.”

These are the words of Mark Hart, GEM UK Team Lead and Deputy Director of Enterprise
Research Centre at Aston Business School, shared during a GEM webinar held in
November 2022.
“Throughout the years, GEM data has been which took place on 6 December at the Chess
consistently used by government officials in Room, House of Commons. Over lunch, Hart
Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the United and GEM Executive Director Aileen Ionescu-
Kingdom,” said Hart. “Individuals from a range Somers shared key findings from the GEM
of departments look at our reports and seek to 2021/2022 Women’s Entrepreneurship Report
understand them. We have discussions all the and their implications for UK enterprise policy
time with officials on how GEM data can impact (participants are featured in the image above).
policy. There is particular interest around gender, Outcomes from the discussion with the officials
ethnicity and immigration.” will be taken forward as policy suggestions
An example of such a conversation was across government and to all political parties
the Savvitas Business & Parliament Forum and relevant bodies.

The Savvitas Business


& Parliament Forum,
6 December 2022,
Chess Room, House of
Commons, London.
Standing, left to right:
Paula Whitehouse
(Director, Aston Centre for
Growth); Claire Harwood
(Permira Credit);
Shernett Ranson (Cabinet
Office); Catherine Wright
(Silicon Valley Bank);
Helene Martin Gee (President,
Savvitas — savvy women
with gravitas!!); Jill Pay
(The Gender Index); and
Aileen Ionescu-Somers
(CEO, GEM Global).
Seated: Professor Mark
Hart (Deputy Director,
ERC and GEM UK Lead).

6 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


“Entrepreneurial
Intentions, Total
Entrepreneurial Activity,
Established Business
Ownership, and
Business Closure
Activity by Race and
Ethnicity in the US
Adult Population,
2021”, from the GEM
2021/2022 United
States Report

Mónica Río Nevado de Zelaya, Dean of the In the United States, White House officials
School of Economic Sciences at the Universidad have previously drawn on GEM results. The GEM
Francisco Marroquín and head of the GEM USA research team has provided testimony to the
Guatemala Team, noted on the webinar that United States House of Representatives Committee
her team’s research has significant influence on Small Business. There is great potential for
among the media and with policymakers in the policymakers concerned about racial equity to
country. leverage the findings from the latest GEM USA
“When we launch our National Report, we Report which features breakdowns across white,
are very visible in the press, and throughout the black and hispanic entrepreneurs (see the graphic
year we present results to different groups,” she for an example).
said. “GEM is an indicator referenced for good “We provide breakdowns in various ways,”
results by the Economics Ministry Department said Jeff Shay, Professor of Entrepreneurship at
in Guatemala. Everyone here uses GEM as the Babson College and head of the GEM USA Team.
reference point for entrepreneurial activity.” “If I am a policymaker and I want to make the
Most poignantly, GEM research in Guatemala case for funding my diverse city or state, I would
helped influence a new law on entrepreneurship. be drawing on GEM’s data.”
The GEM Guatemala Team shared feedback about Concluded Ionescu-Somers: “The above are
changes to make to the law due to the evidence just a few examples that highlight how we provide
from GEM data. Some of these recommendations policymakers everything they need to know
were adopted. about entrepreneurship in a country, region or
“One of the main purposes of our university is city. Our GEM data tells a remarkable story about
to increase freedom of action for entrepreneurs,” entrepreneurship over some 23 years. However,
explained Nevado de Zelaya. “That is why GEM is aside from tracking and monitoring the data,
so important. We want to read the answers from it is equally important for GEM to provide an
our entrepreneurs to know what is holding them up-to-date year-on-year narrative to policymakers
back and to make this visible. This increases the so that, in turn, they can make decisions that
possibility of entrepreneurs to act more freely and pave the way for more successful, high-quality
to move forward in a better way.” entrepreneurship in their countries.”

To explore collaboration possibilities with GEM, contact [email protected].

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 7


Key GEM Definitions and
Abbreviations
Adult Population The APS is a comprehensive interview questionnaire, administered to a minimum of 2,000 adults
Survey (APS) in each GEM economy, designed to collect detailed information on the entrepreneurial activities,
attitudes and aspirations of respondents.
National Expert The NES is completed by selected experts in each GEM economy and collects views on the context
Survey (NES) in which entrepreneurship takes place in that economy. It provides information about the aspects of
a country’s socio-economic characteristics that, according to research, have a significant impact on
national entrepreneurship: referred to as the Entrepreneurship Framework Conditions (EFCs).
Total early-stage The percentage of adults (aged 18–64) who are starting or running a new business.
Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA)
Established Business The percentage of adults (aged 18–64) who are currently the owner-manager of an established
Ownership (EBO) business, i.e. owning and managing a business that has paid salaries, wages or any other payments
to the owners, for more than 42 months.
Entrepreneurial The conditions identified by GEM that enhance (or hinder) new business creation in a given
Framework economy, and form the framework for the NES. The conditions are:
Conditions (EFCs) A1. Entrepreneurial Finance  Are there sufficient funds for new startups?
A2. Ease of Access to Entrepreneurial Finance  And are those funds easy to access?
B1. Government Policy: Support and Relevance  Do they promote and support startups?
B2. Government Policy: Taxes and Bureaucracy  Or are new businesses burdened?
C. Government Entrepreneurial Programs  Are quality support programs available?
D1. Entrepreneurial Education at School  Do schools introduce entrepreneurship ideas?
D2. Entrepreneurial Education Post-School  Do colleges offer courses in starting a business?
E. Research and Development Transfers  Can research be translated into new businesses?
F. Commercial and Professional Infrastructure  Are these sufficient and affordable?
G1. Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics  Are markets free, open and growing?
G2. Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation  Do regulations encourage or restrict entry?
H. Physical Infrastructure  Is this sufficient and affordable?
I. Social and Cultural Norms  Does culture encourage and celebrate entrepreneurship?

National This summarizes in one figure the average state of 13 national Entrepreneurial Framework
Entrepreneurial Conditions selected by GEM researchers as the most reliable determinants of a favourable
Context Index (NECI) environment for entrepreneurship. It is calculated as the simple average of 13 variables that
represent the EFCs, and which have been measured through a block of items evaluated by an
11-point Likert scale and summarized by applying factorial analyses (principal component method).
National Team GEM is a consortium of “National Teams”. Each Team is led by a local university or other institution
with a strong interest in entrepreneurship. The team is the official national representative of
the project: responsible for collecting GEM data in the country on an annual basis, producing a
“National Report” on their findings, and acting as the point of contact for GEM enquiries.

8 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


GEM Income Classification
Level A Economies with a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita of more than $40,000.

Level B Economies with a GDP per capita of between $20,000 and $40,000.

Level C Economies with a GDP per capita of less than $20,000.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 9


Acknowledgements
It is a great pleasure to present Global of entrepreneurship to the United Nations
Entrepreneurship Monitor’s 2022/2023 Global Sustainable Development Goals. Both of these
Report: Adapting to a “New Normal”. The GEM themes figure prominently in this Global Report.
Global Report is published annually and requires We warmly thank Professor Rico Baldegger,
the time, expertise and resources of several Director and Professor of Strategy, Innovation and
hundred people around the world, including Entrepreneurship at the School of Management
technical experts at top academic institutions Fribourg (HEG-FR), Switzerland, for this support
and research institutes, sponsoring organizations and also for hosting the launch of this report at
and national experts. Our first acknowledgement his institution in February 2023.
therefore goes to our dedicated GEM National This report, expertly orchestrated by Stephen
Teams and to their sponsors, without whose Hill as main author, brings together results
efforts and support GEM would not be able to and analysis from GEM National Team authors
point to 24 years of existence. across the world. There are too many co-authors
One of our founding organizations and GEM to list here (they are named in the individual
Global Sponsor, Babson College, has, over many chapters), but their work is highly appreciated
years, devoted very substantial financial and since it brings a high degree of diversity to GEM
in-kind resources to GEM. 2022 was no exception. thought leadership and helps us to truly reflect
For Babson College’s unconditional contributions, a global perspective on the “state of the art” of
both in 2022 and in the past two decades, we are entrepreneurship. Special recognition is due
exceedingly grateful. In particular, we thank the to two of the co-authors — Thomas Schøtt and
leadership of Babson’s Arthur M. Blank School Sreevas Sahasranamam — for their additional
for Entrepreneurial Leadership, Donna Levin, efforts to review the entire report.
Jeffrey Shay and Smaiyra Million, as well as GEM is fortunate to have an extremely
Donna Kelley, Babson’s Frederic C. Hamilton dedicated GEM Global core team that work
Professor of Free Enterprise Studies, for their virtually and truly globally from Tokyo, Spain,
strong support. Portugal, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and
We also warmly thank the Cartier Women’s the United States. We acknowledge the careful
Initiative (CWI), with which GEM has had a project management and data harmonization
strategic partnership for the last three years. work of our data managers, Francis Carmona
Acknowledgement goes to Wingee Sampaio, and Alicia Coduras, with support from Henrique
Global Program Director of CWI for her passionate Bastos, and the efforts of our Communications
interest in GEM’s activities and willingness to Advisor Kevin Anselmo, especially for his great
help us boost the women’s entrepreneurship work with Steve on the Economy Profiles. We
dimensions of GEM research. We highly appreciate the tireless efforts of Stephen Hill and
appreciate CWI’s generous financial support Dean Bargh, of Witchwood Production House,
for both the GEM Global Report and the GEM in steering the final draft of this complex report
Women’s Entrepreneurship Report. to successful completion. Last, but certainly
The School of Management Fribourg not least, thanks to our GEM Finance and
(HEG-FR) at the University of Applied Sciences Administration Manager Aurea Almanso for her
Western Switzerland has also dedicated unfailing dedication to ensuring that GEM runs
financial resources for GEM’s work on women’s smoothly, like the 24-year-old well-oiled machine
entrepreneurship and on the contribution that it is. To all, warm thanks and appreciation.

Aileen Ionescu-Somers, PhD


GEM Executive Director

10 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Foreword
The well-known opening line of A Tale of Two always been — an important part of the solution
Cities by Charles Dickens may well apply to the to repair damaged economies and societies.
current world state of affairs: “It was the best of Results presented in our GEM 2022/2023 Global
times; it was the worst of times . . .” There is no Report show that not only are policymakers in
doubt that, depending on where you live in the some countries striving harder to make it easier
world, many are effectively experiencing the worst for entrepreneurs to put down their commercial
times of their lives to date, because of the spillover “roots” and create successful businesses, but
effects of multiple crises. The remaining economic entrepreneurs themselves are clearly dusting
impacts of the global COVID-19 pandemic and the themselves off from the hardship effects of the
significant consequences of conflict in Ukraine global pandemic and continuing to do what they
have produced unprecedented global supply do best: grasp opportunities. If the interface
chain disruptions, increases in energy and between policymaking and entrepreneurship
food prices, and overall commotion in markets is working effectively, then entrepreneurship
worldwide. can contribute richly to economic recovery,
However, the quote is interestingly paradoxical thus making economies more resilient and,
since out of crisis, very often, come opportunities. dare we hope, shock-proof. At the very least,
For some at least, that means the worst of times entrepreneurs can help economies return to the
can truly become the best of times. We at GEM “best of times”.
would suggest that, in many ways, it is the best of As always, the GEM Global Report is based
times for entrepreneurs. The world is undergoing on hard data collected from literally thousands
an energy crisis and, in many countries, an energy of entrepreneurs and national experts around
transition that struggles to take hold. We are living the world. This 2022/2023 Global Report adds
through a time of increasing climate change and a 24th year of data collection and results to the
decreasing biodiversity, requiring substantial GEM portfolio. Our aspiration at GEM is clear:
mitigation and adaptation. After a period of to provide transparency to policymakers so that
marked progress in alleviating extreme poverty, it they can make better decisions to truly promote
is unfortunately again taking hold in some regions entrepreneurship, and also observe and act on
across the world. Markets are rapidly shifting. the impact of their decision-making over time.
Our supply chains are clearly not resilient enough A fundamental question is: Can policymakers
or designed to be shock-proof. Our retail and transform the results of our research into robust
distribution systems are disrupting. Our global and productive decision-making, allowing
economic monetary system is transforming by the increasing numbers of entrepreneurs to create
day. The pandemic catapulted the world towards wealth and contribute to societal well-being
a so-called “New Normal”, which has not yet worldwide? Based on our scientific observations
fully landed in the collective conscience such at GEM from over the years, the answer to this
that it can be properly described. However, can question is also a resounding “Yes!”
all these phenomenal events, and multiple others Here’s to a return to the “best of times” in the
not mentioned here, constitute opportunities for “New Normal”, however that lands, leaving no
entrepreneurs? The answer, of course, is “Yes!” one behind.
Entrepreneurship is undoubtedly — and has
Aileen Ionescu-Somers, PhD
GEM Executive Director

José Ernesto Amorós Espinosa, PhD


GEM–GERA Board Chair and GEM Mexico

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 11


GLOBAL TEAM

Aileen Ionescu-Somers, PhD Kevin Anselmo Jonathan Francis Carmona, MSc Professor Alicia Coduras, PhD
Executive Director Communications Advisor Data Team Supervisor National Expert
[email protected] Survey Coordinator

Aurea Almanso, MBA Stephen Hill, DSc


Operations, GEM Global 2022/23 Global Report
[email protected] Lead Author

GOVERNANCE BOARD

José Ernesto Amorós, PhD Fatem Boutaleb, PhD Maribel Guerrero, PhD Ehud Menipaz, PhD
Interim Board Chair National Team Representative National Team Representative National Team Representative
National Team Representative GEM Morocco GEM Chile GEM Israel
GEM Mexico

Jeffrey Shay, PhD Niels Bosma, PhD


National Team Representative Senior Research Advisor
GEM USA National Team Representative
GEM UK

GEM APS GRIPS* GROUP GEM NES GRIPS* GROUP


Coordination: Aileen Ionescu-Somers & Francis Carmona, GEM Global Coordination: Alicia Coduras, GEM Global & GEM Saudi Arabia
Niels Bosma, GEM Senior Research Advisor/GEM UK Miguel Angoitia, GEM Spain
Ana Fernández-Laviada and Nuria Calvo, GEM Spain Niels Bosma, GEM Senior Research Advisor/GEM UK
Christian Friedl, GEM Austria Chafik Bouhaddioui, GEM UAE
Maribel Guerrero, GEM Chile Angus Bowmaker-Falconer, GEM South Africa
Mark Hart, GEM UK Simara Greco, GEM Brazil
Peter Josty, GEM Canada Mark Hart, GEM UK
Mahdi Majbouri, GEM USA Jeffrey Shay, GEM USA
Anna Tarnawa, GEM Poland

* GRIPs = GEM Research & Innovation Projects

12 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


About GEM
Entrepreneurship is an essential driver of societal and how to influence key stakeholders so
health and wealth. It is also a formidable engine that they get the support they need;
of economic growth. It promotes the essential • Sponsors both advance their organizational
innovation required not only to exploit new interests and gain a higher profile through
opportunities, promote productivity and create their association with GEM;
employment, but to also address some of society’s
• International organizations leverage insights,
greatest challenges, such as the United Nations
but can also incorporate or integrate GEM
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or the
indicators to their own data sets, or use GEM
economic shock wave created by the COVID-19
data as a benchmark for their own analyses.
pandemic. The promotion of entrepreneurship
will be central to multiple governments worldwide GEM has an impressive and highly credible
for the foreseeable future, especially considering track record. In numbers, GEM represents:
the significant negative impacts on economies • 24 years of data, allowing longitudinal
due to the pandemic. Governments and other analysis in and across geographies on
stakeholders will increasingly need hard, robust multiple levels;
and credible data to make key decisions that • Up to 170,000+ interviews annually with
stimulate sustainable forms of entrepreneurship experts and adult populations including
and promote healthy entrepreneurial ecosystems entrepreneurs of all ages;
worldwide. During its 24 years of existence, • Data from 120 economies across five
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) has continents;
repeatedly contributed to such efforts, providing
• Collaboration with over 500 specialists in
policymakers with valuable insights on how to
entrepreneurship research;
best foster entrepreneurship to propel growth and
prosperity once again. • Involvement of some 300+ academic and
GEM carries out survey-based research research institutions;
on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship • Support from more than 200 funding
ecosystems around the world. GEM is a networked institutions.
consortium of national country teams primarily GEM began in 1999 as a joint research project
associated with top academic institutions. It is between Babson College (USA) and London
the only global research source that collects data Business School (UK). The consortium has become
on entrepreneurship directly from individual the richest source of reliable information on the
entrepreneurs. GEM tools and data are therefore state of entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial
unique and benefit numerous stakeholder groups. ecosystems across the globe, publishing not only
By becoming involved with GEM: the GEM Global Report annually, but also a range
• Academics are able to apply unique of national and special topic reports each year.
methodological approaches to studying GEM’s first annual study covered 10 countries;
entrepreneurship at the national level; since then some 120 countries from every corner
• Policymakers are able to make better- of the globe have participated in GEM research.
informed decisions to help entrepreneurs As a result, GEM has gone beyond a project to
and entrepreneurial ecosystems thrive; become the highly networked organization that
it is today. GEM can confidently stake a claim to
• Entrepreneurs have better knowledge on
be the largest ongoing study of entrepreneurial
where to invest sometimes scarce resources
dynamics in the world.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 13


Join our research project
It is difficult for policymakers to make
informed decisions without having the right
data. Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM)
fills this void. GEM is the only global research
project that collects data on entrepreneurship
directly from the source—entrepreneurs!
It is your one-stop shop for everything you
need to know about entrepreneurship in
your country, region or city.
Be part of future Global Reports, providing
a snapshot of entrepreneurial activity across
the world. You can contribute towards
National Reports that include international
benchmarking, local context and national
entrepreneurship policy recommendations.

“GEM offers academics the opportunity to be


part of a prestigious network, explore various
dimensions of entrepreneurship and gain a full
picture about the entrepreneurial activity of a
country.”
Virginia Lasio, Team Leader of
GEM Ecuador and Professor at the ESPAE
Graduate School of Management

For more information, visit www.gemconsortium.org or write [email protected]


Executive Summary
Stephen Hill, Aileen Ionescu-Somers and Ehud Menipaz

Entrepreneurship, or the act of starting and running a new business, is a key catalyst
of economic development. It is also an important driver of economic recovery: from
the effects of the recent COVID-19 pandemic as well as more recent shocks, such as
the war between Russia and Ukraine, with its related supply chain issues and rising
energy costs. At any time, but especially during times of crisis, it is vital that the
entrepreneurship dynamics and national frameworks to promote entrepreneurship are
carefully defined and measured. Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) research can
provide significant metrics to policymakers along the road to economic recovery, which
enable informed and astute — but, most importantly, effective — decision-making.

This 2022/2023 Global Report presents the results of GEM’s 24th research cycle. This
adds another round of extensive national surveys to an already substantial GEM
database of entrepreneurial results. In 2022, over 170,000 individuals were interviewed
across 49 different economies, adding their views and experiences to over 3 million
previously interviewed for the GEM Adult Population Survey (APS) over the previous
two decades. These 49 economies represent about two-thirds of the global population in
2022. It includes China with a population of 1.3 billion, as well as India, which according
to the United Nations is likely to be declared the world’s most populous country in 2023.
Furthermore, GEM’s National Expert Survey (NES) features 51 economies (all of the 49
economies that participated in the GEM APS, plus Italy and Argentina). The NES is a
survey of national experts in each economy charged with assessing the key components
and characteristics of the entrepreneurial environment for that economy.

KEY FINDINGS
• Although the worst effects of the COVID-19 pandemic appear to be coming
to an end, its economic impacts are still being felt across the globe and
household incomes continue to be reduced. As noted in the two previous
Global Reports, the pandemic hit hardest those who could least afford it. Within the
group of lowest-income economies (Level C), the share of adults reporting that the
pandemic had reduced their household income ranged from almost nine out of 10
in Togo to just over half in Iran. Among the high-income (Level A) economies, that
range was from two out of three in the United Arab Emirates to less than one in 10 in
Norway.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 15


THE PANDEMIC HIT HARDEST THOSE WHO COULD LEAST AFFORD IT
Share of adults reporting that the pandemic had reduced their household income — by income category
(weighted by population size; including the five economies who were the hardest hit)

LEVEL B
average
62%

Mexico (78%)
India (74%)

LEVEL A Venezeula (79%)


average Togo (88%)

32%
Indonesia (75%)

LEVEL C
average
72%

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022

• Fear of failure is a serious constraint on business startups in many economies


from all income groups. In a number of economies, with examples including
Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the Netherlands, Puerto Rico and Poland, high
proportions of adults agree that starting a business is relatively easy, and see good
opportunities to start a business locally, while also considering themselves to have
the skills and experience to create a startup. However, around half of those seeing
such opportunities are nevertheless deterred from taking action by fear of failure.
Reducing the risks and perceived costs of new business failure — for example, by
making changes to insolvency regulations, or better promoting entrepreneurial
successes and role models — could have a positive impact in increasing startup
rates, in particular for women.

• The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on entrepreneurial perceptions across


the globe has been highly varied, with some counterintuitive findings. Of the
38 economies participating in the APS in both 2019 (thus pre-pandemic) and again
in 2022, there were 12 economies in which the percentage of adults seeing good
local opportunities to start a business fell by five points or more. These included
developed economies such as the United States (−21 percentage points), Poland
(−15) and Greece (−14). However, there were another nine economies in which that

16 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


percentage actually increased by more than five points: including Puerto Rico (+25),
Brazil (+21) and Saudi Arabia (+16). Further research is required to explain these
differences, but one key may be the level of support that governments were willing
(and able) to offer to businesses and households.

• In 2022, the highest levels of early-stage entrepreneurial activity were in


the Latin America & Caribbean region. However, levels of entrepreneurial
activity were also highly variable from country to country. Of the 49 economies that
participated in the GEM APS, just six had more than one in four adults starting or
running a new business: Guatemala, Colombia, Panama, Chile, Uruguay and the
United Arab Emirates. In contrast, three economies had less than one in 20 adults
doing the same: Morocco, Greece and Poland. The explanation for these differences
may lie with social and cultural norms as much as with economic variables.

• There is a negative association between the level of early-stage


entrepreneurial activity and human capital development, as measured by the
UN Human Development Index (HDI). Previous GEM Global Reports have noted
a negative association between Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)
rates and levels of GDP per capita, even if that association has weakened over the
years. This 2022/2023 Global Report tested an alternative measure of well-being
— the UN HDI — and found that this also had a negative association with TEA
rates. This also raised some interesting, but as yet unanswered, questions. Why
do a few economies have high levels of both HDI and TEA, and why do rather
more economies have high levels of HDI and low levels of TEA? Could it be
because higher levels of human development potentially mean more rewarding
employment opportunities, thereby reducing the attraction of entrepreneurship as
a career choice?

• The global pandemic had a mixed effect on entrepreneurship across the


world. Again, we looked at the 38 economies that participated in GEM research in
both 2019 and 2022. Discounting small (less than one percentage point) changes,
there are 12 economies in which the level of TEA was higher in 2022 than in 2019,
and 16 economies in which TEA levels fell. It is difficult to draw out commonalities,
since all regions and income levels are represented in each group.

• New entrepreneurs frequently declare that they take social and


environmental implications into account when making strategic decisions
about the future of their business. Notwithstanding the potential for social
desirability bias, it is nevertheless significant that more than half of new
entrepreneurs declare that they always take social implications into account
in every participating economy (with the exception of Norway, interestingly).
A majority of new business entrepreneurs also declared taking environmental
implications into account in every economy but two (Oman and Israel).
Conversely, more than four out of five took social implications into account in

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 17


19 of the 49 economies, and in 21 of the 49 economies for environmental. Hence
there is room for optimism about the positive social and environmental impacts
of these future businesses.

• Job creation expectations of those starting new businesses declined


somewhat during the pandemic. Of the 32 economies participating in the APS in
each year from 2019–2022, there are 13 in which the percentage of those starting a
new business and expecting to employ no additional people fell (most notably in
Poland, Brazil and the Republic of Korea), but another 19 in which that proportion
increased (most notably in the Slovak Republic, Germany and Switzerland). The
differentiating characteristic may have been the inclination of people in some
countries to start a business just to generate an income during times of hardship.

• In 2022, men were more likely than women to start a new business. Of the 49
economies participating in the APS, there were just four in which the level of female
new entrepreneurial activity exceeded that of men: Togo, Indonesia, Qatar and
Poland, representing the three income levels used by GEM to categorize economies.
However, one trend that may have been accelerated by the pandemic could be the
spread of greater entrepreneurial gender equity beyond just low-income economies.
Of the 38 economies participating in GEM in both 2019 and 2022, there were 21 in
which the relative gender gap had decreased, just four of which were Level C.

THE FIVE BEST ECONOMIES IN WHICH TO START A BUSINESS


According to the GEM 2022 National Entrepreneurship Context Index

5 The Netherlands

4 India

3 Taiwan

1 United Arab Emirates


2 Saudi Arabia

Source: GEM National Expert Survey 2022

18 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


• Younger people are still more likely than older people to be starting new
businesses. The Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) rate of the 18–34
age group exceeded that of the 35–64 age group in 37 of the 49 economies in the
GEM APS. This gives a distinct entrepreneurial advantage to societies with younger
populations, and an entrepreneurial disadvantage to those with more ageing
populations, such as many economies in northern Europe.

• The lowest business exit (and TEA) rates are within Europe and the highest
business exit (and TEA) rates are in Latin and North America, and in the Gulf.
Of the 49 GEM APS economies, every European economy had a business exit rate of
less than 6% and a TEA rate of less than 15%. Every economy outside Europe had
either an exit rate greater than 6% or a TEA rate of more than 15%. Most had both.
This may point to differences in entrepreneurial culture between Europe and the
rest of the world.

• The proportion of business exits attributed to the pandemic is declining


rapidly, indicating the end to at least some of the direct economic hardship
it has caused. In 2020, COVID-19 was cited as a reason for less than one in five
business exits in just 10 economies. In 2022 this had grown to 22 economies.

• While high income is a helpful contributory factor, it does not in itself assure
a high-quality entrepreneurial environment. For the GEM NES survey, the
quality of a national entrepreneurial environment is assessed by national experts
from that economy against 13 Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions. In 2022,
three Level C economies — India, China and Indonesia — had nine or more of these
conditions scored as sufficient. Only seven of the 22 participating Level A economies
either matched or improved on this assessment. Two Level A economies, Spain and
Italy, had three or fewer conditions rated as sufficient. However, high-income United
Arab Emirates was, for the second year in succession, rated as the best place to start
a new business.

CONCLUSIONS
At the end of the day, entrepreneurship matters and it matters greatly. That is why GEM
brings important annual research findings to the attention of policymakers worldwide.
Entrepreneurship brings jobs and incomes, turns ideas into new goods and services,
hastens structural change and improves lives. Certainly, most governments have long
lists of issues and projects competing for their attention and resources. However, few
propositions have the transformative power of new businesses, with entrepreneurs
at their helm helping to build a more prosperous, inclusive, and socially and
environmentally conscious future along with undeniable commercial benefits. While
there is no doubt that the road to economic recovery and sustainability is currently a

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 19


rocky one, successful entrepreneurship can drive economic recovery, help to create
innovative business models (which, for example, mitigate the impacts of current higher
energy costs), offer new ways to live, work and consume, and can fulfil the ambitions of
creative, optimistic and determined people.

REPORT FORMAT
Part 1 of this GEM 2022/2023 Global Report presents a brief analysis of the 2022 APS
results, looking across results in 49 participating economies to identify commonalties
and differences. Consistency in the GEM APS questions and in the derivation of key
variables allows comparisons between economies in 2022 and, as importantly, in the
evolution of those variables over time. Exploring how the global COVID-19 pandemic
impacted entrepreneurial variables by comparing results since 2020 is an obvious,
highly practical and useful application of GEM research. Not surprisingly, many key
entrepreneurial variables fell with the onset of the pandemic. Results for 2022 show that
recovery from the direct economic impacts of that pandemic has been highly variable
across economies, and that many countries are still suffering. The 2022 GEM results
also offer a glimpse of the initial entrepreneurial effects of the war in Ukraine and
subsequent changes in prices, particularly for energy.

Part 2 mainly focuses on the entrepreneurial environment, or context, in which an


individual decides to pursue entrepreneurship through the NES findings. As such, it
provides food for thought not only for policymakers but also entrepreneurs thinking of
creating new businesses with global growth potential and seeking the most conducive
environment to do so. These assessments are used by GEM researchers to calculate
a single figure representing the overall quality of the economy’s entrepreneurial
environment: the National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI); and the final ranking
is also presented in this part of the report.

Following this, the reader will find a full series of individual national economy
profiles, presenting key entrepreneurial activity data and summarizing that economy’s
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions, alongside a brief Policy Roadmap, identifying
key entrepreneurial strengths and weaknesses.

Finally this 2022/2203 GEM Global Report concludes with a useful Appendix for
researchers, which tabulates entrepreneurial variables across the participating
economies in 2022.

20 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Key Thoughts for
Policymakers from the
GEM 2022/2023 Global
Report Authors

It is difficult to make informed decisions without having the right data. GEM fills this
void for policymakers. GEM is the only global research source that collects data on
entrepreneurship directly from the source — entrepreneurs! Policymakers can take
action based on GEM data to help their respective entrepreneurial ecosystems to thrive.
Based on this year’s research, the GEM 2022/2023 Global Report authorship team shared
some key insights for policymakers.

“In the midst of turbulence and uncertainty, policy focused on innovation


becomes a priority for recovery and growth. It is a solution for better
competitiveness and development by bringing the economy to a better
quantitative and qualitative level, creating added value, quality jobs and
strengthening human capital. Policymakers have more interest than ever
in pivoting to new holistic paradigms of intervention, abandoning those
that crises have made obsolete. This prevents missed opportunities that by
definition multiply after crises and, of course, to address issues related to
population anchoring and regional inequalities in order to foster a more
cohesive, inclusive and sustainable entrepreneurship.”
Fatima Boutaleb, PhD, Hassan II University of Casablanca, GEM Morocco

“The economic recovery in many countries following the COVID-19 pandemic


has been complicated by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Governments have
implemented measures to promote entrepreneurial activity, but these efforts
have been hindered by inflation, fluctuations in the stock and financial
markets, and difficulties in managing funds. As a result, starting and
maintaining a business has become a challenge for many due to high costs and
limited demand. Policymakers will need to be innovative in order to overcome
these challenges and support entrepreneurship in 2023.”
Alicia Coduras, PhD, GEM Global and GEM Saudi Arabia

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 21


“The GEM Global Report provides a unique window into this turbulent and
dynamic world of entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurs take multiple risks to
directly and indirectly impact society. In economic terms, new entrepreneurs
create jobs, translate ideas into products and services, introduce technologies,
stimulate market competitiveness, generate income and add value in domestic
and international markets. In social terms, new entrepreneurs tackle societal
issues in their value-creation process and business models. This year’s GEM
Report motivates us to re-legitimize entrepreneurs’ socio-economic impacts
and rethink public policy instruments for enhancing entrepreneurs’ impacts.”
Maribel Guerrero, PhD, Arizona State University, USA, and
Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile; GEM Chile

“Year after year, entrepreneurial education at school is consistently rated worst


of all Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions. With a small number of notable
exceptions, most countries are foregoing the opportunity to add to their
entrepreneurial potential. The costs of this failure will reverberate through
decades of new starts that never happened, simply because many people were
just not aware.”
Stephen Hill, DSc, Lead Author of the GEM 2022/2023 Global Report

“GEM national experts score against 13 Framework Conditions that lead


to the country ranking in GEM’s National Entrepreneurship Context Index
(NECI). This provides policymakers with a ‘how to’ guide on fostering
entrepreneurship within their specific national context. With this in mind, I
strongly encourage you to review the Economy Profiles within this report. They
highlight the 13 framework scores behind each participating economy’s NECI
ranking. Just a few examples in 2022: Entrepreneurial Education Post-School
increased dramatically in Switzerland; Taiwan ranked first for three conditions
(Government Policy: Taxes and Bureaucracy, Commercial and Professional
Infrastructure, and Physical Infrastructure); and Morocco improved in almost
all of the 13 framework scores. The wealth of knowledge behind these profiles
can be used to support more effective strategic decision-making and robust
policies for promotion of entrepreneurship in your own context.”
Aileen Ionescu-Somers, PhD, GEM Executive Director

“Over GEM’s 24-year existence, hundreds of policy recommendations on


innovation and entrepreneurship have been made nationally and globally
in GEM reports by top-level GEM scientists. Policymakers can turn GEM
recommendations into policies and directives at national, regional and local
levels, implement them effectively and efficiently, and then monitor and
measure their impact on the innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem. I
invite policymakers to reflect on our main GEM findings, summarized in Part
2 of this report, related to National Contexts and Economy Profiles. We can
collaborate to focus on achieving great beneficial impact for society from
GEM’s mammoth multi-year scientific endeavour.”
Prof. Emeritus Ehud Menipaz, Ben Gurion University; GEM Israel

22 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


“The impact of COVID-19 on entrepreneurial activity has been highly variable,
evidenced from our comparison over the 2019–2022 period. After excluding
countries with changes of less than one percentage point, 12 economies saw
an increase in entrepreneurial activity, while 16 saw a decrease. Preliminary
evidence suggests differences in the entrepreneurial ecosystem and support
offered to entrepreneurs during the pandemic as potential reasons for the
divergent trends.”
Sreevas Sahasranamam, PhD, University of
Strathclyde, Glasgow; GEM UK

“The diversity of human values that bring people to start a business is


striking. Policymakers need to understand these motivations. Some people
start a business because they value making a difference in the world.
Others long to continue a family tradition of running businesses. There are
individuals motivated to accumulate wealth. Then there are some who resort
to entrepreneurship because jobs are difficult to find. Despite this diversity
of motives, entrepreneurs form a kind of community, united by their mutual
awareness, networking and aspirations. The GEM Global Report provides
clarity to these and other important aspects that help define the strengths and
weaknesses of an economy’s entrepreneurial ecosystem.”
Thomas Schøtt, PhD, University of Agder, Norway

“Entrepreneurial action continues to be constrained by fear of failure, despite


high self-confidence, encouraging perceptions of startup opportunities
and belief that starting a business is easy. Access to educational programs
specifically focused on risk assessment and mitigation coupled with policies
that reduce the perceived personal costs of failure could unleash a significant,
and pent-up, wave of entrepreneurial activity.”
Jeffrey P. Shay, PhD, Babson College, Professor of
Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Division; GEM USA

“In 2022, we have again witnessed disparities between genders, age groups
and levels of education. In some countries, only one in five businesses is
owned by a woman, while in others, three-quarters of new businesses are
started by individuals under the age of 35. These gaps highlight areas for
improvement and should be a focus for policymakers seeking to support the
success of future entrepreneurs.”
Przemysław Zbierowski, PhD, Associate Professor,
University of Economics in Katowice; GEM Poland

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 23


Collaborate with GEM to assess
city and regional readiness
for entrepreneurship
What makes a city or region attractive to “The GEM ESI methodology provided
a valuable contribution to deepen our
entrepreneurs? Which factors draw creative knowledge of Madrid’s entrepreneurial
entrepreneurs to a city or region … indeed, ecosystem. It is a solid scientific approach and
offers the possibility to analyse a number of
to any entrepreneurial ecosystem? What variables aligned to different key pillars. This
gives them the confidence that they can enabled us to identify how the main actors
interact and the key issues to be addressed to
build successful, value-adding and profitable foster ecosystem development. The ESI tool is
a great input for diagnosis and policymaking.”
companies in a nurturing context? How —Isidro de Pablo López,
good are cities and regions at building these Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

contexts and nurturing entrepreneurship? “Reporting on the findings from the Global
Entrepreneurship Monitor’s Entrepreneurial
Collaborate with GEM to find answers to Ecosystem Quality Index in our region
of Nova Scotia, Canada, generated a
these questions in cities and regions that significant amount of interest from
are important to you! Our Entrepreneurial policymakers and ecosystem actors. Some
of the notable findings, based on our data,
Ecosystem Quality Composite Index (ESI) have informed debate and helped leading
is a diagnostic tool that provides frameworks ecosystem players to think about strategies
for further ecosystem development.”
and data to analyse just about any subnational —Kevin McKague, PhD,
Canada Research Chair and Associate
ecosystem. ESI reports have been conducted Professor of Entrepreneurship, Shannon
in several ecosystems around the world. School of Business, Cape Breton University

For more information, visit www.gemconsortium.org or write [email protected]


PART 1

Analysis
1
What Is GEM?
Stephen Hill and Aileen Ionescu-Somers

1.1  BRIEF INTRODUCTION


The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) is a School in the UK. This collaboration quickly grew
long-term collaborative research initiative which from a handful of economies to what is today the
aims to measure and monitor entrepreneurship. most extensive and longest-running global study
GEM was started in 1999 by forward-thinking of entrepreneurship. This 24th annual GEM Global
academics at its founding organizations: Babson Report draws on extensive survey results from 51
College in Boston, USA, and London Business economies across the world.

1.2  THE GLOBAL CONTEXT


Starting a new business is never easy, even when the most difficult business environment since the
all the requisite stars align — i.e. confidence is GEM project began in 1999. Starting a business
up, the business context is ideal and incomes is always a triumph of hope over circumstance;
are growing. Last year’s GEM Global Report1 was starting that business in 2022 required a hefty
cautiously optimistic that the global economy dose of optimism.
would begin its recovery from the impact of Because of the global pandemic, recent GEM
the COVID-19 pandemic, despite supply-side Global Reports have addressed questions such
issues and some rising costs. However, such as whether some entrepreneurs find opportunity
optimism proved short-lived. Russian tanks amid disruption, and how entrepreneurs have
rolled into Ukraine in February 2022, sparking been leveraging these opportunities. Moreover,
not only conflict and destruction but a slew while steeply rising energy prices represent a
of international sanctions and unprecedented significant burden for energy users, they can be
energy price rises. This had the further negative a windfall to energy producers. Similarly, energy-
effect of lifting household and business costs exporting economies and their governments have
to dizzying heights, prompting governments made unanticipated gains and have enjoyed
with sufficient resources to reintroduce support an influx of foreign currency. Such a pattern of
packages on a scale that easily matched those of gains and losses inevitably has its effects on
the pandemic, further increasing national debt household incomes and business costs, reducing
burdens worldwide. Longer-term impacts include real incomes and increasing costs in energy-
an increase in the costs of energy-intensive importing economies. Of course, even in those
products and services, and strong incentives to adversely affected economies, crisis and change
minimize the use of fossil fuels. always bring opportunities. And entrepreneurs
Because of these developments, many of have proved themselves to be particularly adept at
those starting a business in 2022 face possibly grasping opportunities.

1 GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) (2022). Global


Entrepreneurship Monitor 2021/2022 Global Report:
Opportunity Amid Disruption. London: GEM. https://
www.gemconsortium.org/reports/latest-global-report

26 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Claudia Isabel Barona


Co-founder of Lifepack (Colombia)

Optimism in responding to disruption


“An entrepreneur is passionate, a dreamer,
creative, optimistic and has confidence to
bring one’s ideas to fruition.”

These are the words of Claudia Isabel Barona,


co-founder of Lifepack, a Colombian-based
company that produces 100% biodegradable
ecological products made from natural fibres
and seeds. Lifepack relies on an environmentally
sustainable business model and is supported by
NGOs, government entities and universities, among
others.

This optimism has been on display throughout her


entrepreneurial journey, especially over the past few
years.

Lifepack has evolved in response to COVID-19. Before


COVID, business was primarily conducted face to As a result, new lines of business were born including
face. But, as sales channels changed due to the a technology transfer programme. The company
pandemic, Lifepack adapted; now over 70% of its sell its knowledge in implementing the production
transactions are digital. process in other regions and countries.

Lifepack used the disruptions caused by the In 2022, Lifepack has needed to operate in the
pandemic as an opportunity to improve internal face of inflation that has doubled the prices of raw
operational and production processes, something materials. This inflation is reflected in the company’s
that had not been done since the company’s selling prices, but has resulted in lower sales due to
founding in 2014. the lack of purchasing power of the peso. This reality
doesn’t deter Claudia. She concluded:
“We had the opportunity to explore other
fibres (agro-industrial residues/agricultural “The entrepreneur identifies opportunities
residues) in our production process and that arise from the environment and creates
to expand our lines of business, further innovative solutions with global and social
encouraging the circular economy.” well-being in mind.”

1.3  WHY ENTREPRENEURSHIP MATTERS


There are many reasons why entrepreneurship near future, does not meet this requirement.
is important, and why increasing levels of To be considered an entrepreneur by GEM, an
entrepreneurship can indicate a vibrant, dynamic individual must have acted. This can include
economy. Again, entrepreneurship is defined by spending time and funding in seeking to get a
GEM as the act of starting and running a new business off the ground.
business. In other words, it is the act itself that New businesses created by entrepreneurs
is important. Merely thinking about starting deliver jobs, incomes and value-added — the three
a business, or intending to do so even in the cornerstones of economic development — often

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 27


by introducing new products, technologies or If the level of entrepreneurship in any given
processes. In doing so, new businesses launched economy is important, then defining and
by entrepreneurs can also accelerate structural measuring that level must also be important.
change. They can speed up the shift of resources If comparisons are to be made, both between
away from things people no longer want or wish economies and of the same economy over time,
to pay for, towards things they want or for which then it is crucial that entrepreneurship is defined
the entrepreneur perceives a gap in the market and measured in a manner that is both precise
or can create a need. Hence a dynamic economy and consistent over time. It is this precision and
needs a steady stream of new and innovative consistency that has been, and is today, the real
businesses, replenishing the overall stock of strength of GEM. For example, the GEM database,
businesses and firms and transforming ideas into stretching back more than two decades, can
new goods and services. Of course, not all new shed light on the details of historical rises and
businesses engender growth; a new coffee shop falls in levels of entrepreneurship in a particular
concept, for example, if it better serves the needs economy. This continuity and consistency
of consumers, may in fact hasten the decline of allows comparisons to be made, so that like may
existing providers, since, in some economies at always be compared to like. Similarly, the level of
least, consumers are unlikely to drink more coffee. entrepreneurship in one economy in a given year
But even this displacement is significant, since can be compared to the level in another, because
it is the market that ultimately dictates whether both are defined and measured in exactly the
a new coffee shop concept is more economically same way year on year.
sustainable than those that already exist. The act of starting a new business is the
Evidently, not all new businesses succeed; result of a highly individual and personal
many fail. Hence, some resources expended in decision-making process. This process reflects
starting that business may be lost. Yet, even in an individual’s attitudes as well as personal
these cases, it is important to bear in mind that attributes such as knowledge, experience,
not everything is lost. Learning from previous values and motivation, alongside their access
failure may provide the entrepreneur and other to resources. Furthermore, this act takes place
stakeholders with knowledge and experience that within a context of social values that may promote
can prove vital to future business success. Failure or hinder entrepreneurship, and in a locality
also tests resolution and determination, important (termed the entrepreneurial ecosystem) that
FIGURE 1.1 ​ characteristics of successful entrepreneurs. can facilitate or constrain access to resources.
The GEM Conceptual
Framework

OUTCOME
(socio-economic development)
Social, cultural, political,
economic context

National Entrepre- ENTREPRENEURIAL OUTPUT


Framework neurial (new jobs, new value added)
Conditions Framework
Conditions
ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY
SOCIETAL VALUES ABOUT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ◆ BY PHASE
Nascent, new, established,
Basic requirements business exits
INDIVIDUAL ATTRIBUTES
Efficiency enhancers ◆ BY IMPACT
(self-perceptions and
Innovation and business demographics) High growth, innovative,
sophistication market scope

◆ BY TYPE
TEA, EBO, EEA

28 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


GEM keeps its finger on the pulse of all these risk-taking, or may value collective endeavour
aspects of entrepreneurial activity across the over individual achievement. This, too, can
entrepreneurial community: they are explored influence access to resources, including both
in more detail in later chapters of this report. To expertise and capital. It may determine other
illustrate the structure and components of GEM aspects of the new business, including choice of
research, Figure 1.1 presents the GEM Conceptual sector, levels of innovation and scale of ambition.
Framework. These factors in turn greatly influence the impacts
An entrepreneur’s social environment may of any new business in terms of jobs generated,
also, for example, encourage or discourage income levels and economic value-added.

1.4  THE GEM METHODOLOGY


At the heart of GEM research are two many developing countries, where unregistered
complementary core surveys. The first is the businesses may represent a significant proportion
Adult Population Survey (APS), which is of the total stock, and where many new
administered to a structured random sample businesses never mature to the point of being
of at least 2,000 adults (aged 18–64) in each formally registered. In 2022, more than 173,000
participating economy, and often more in larger people completed the GEM APS interview, adding
or more complex national economies. The to an existing GEM database of over 3 million
national sample is structured to reflect the overall respondents across 120 economies since the first
population in terms of age, gender and location: APS survey in 1999.
so, for example, if 20% of adults in a particular While maintaining continuity and consistency
economy are aged 18–34, then 20% of sampled in the APS questions is fundamental, this does
adults will be in that age group. The APS provides not prevent GEM from responding to changing
detailed information on the characteristics of circumstances and priorities. In recent years,
entrepreneurial individuals, their activities, the COVID-19 pandemic has cast a deep shadow
attitudes, motivations and ambitions. It also over national and international economies, and
allows for exploration of the entrepreneur’s active GEM has responded with new and additional
involvement in starting or running a new business questions that have allowed some of the impacts
at different stages of development, whether of that pandemic to be assessed.2 The pandemic
nascent, established, high-growth, etc. Exactly the has hastened changes in the ways that people
same questions are asked in each participating work and live, with less commuting, more online
economy, either by face-to-face or telephone shopping, and a steady drift away from city
interview, occasionally by online survey, with centres, shopping malls and retail parks as the
careful attention to accurate translation into the focal points of consumer activity. Rising energy
many different national languages required. It prices provide a new impetus to more sustainable
is primarily the consistency of these questions, production and consumption, important parts
and the manner in which results are verified of the United Nations Sustainable Development
and used to estimate key variables, that enables Goals (SDGs).3 Other SDGs, such as reducing
comparison within and between economies over poverty and promoting inclusion, may have
time. become more difficult to achieve, given rising
By surveying the activities and perceptions household and business costs.
of individuals, GEM research offers insights into
the personal decision-making process involved
in starting a business, and the subsequent 2 See GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) (2020).
development of that business, in a way that Diagnosing COVID-19 Impacts on Entrepreneurship:
official business statistics, such as the number of Exploring Policy Remedies for Recovery. London:
GEM. http://www.gemconsortium.org/reports/
registered businesses, simply cannot. In addition,
covid-impact-report
because of the APS’s focus on individuals and 3 The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) —
its anonymization of results, it reflects activity adopted by all United Nations Member States in
in the informal or unregistered economy — 2015 as part of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development — are an urgent call for
which is normally beyond the reach of most
action by all countries to help achieve these goals by
official statistics. This is especially important in 2030 (https://sdgs.un.org/goals).

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 29


In 2021, GEM introduced new questions a business exit. These entrepreneurial processes
in the APS related to the role that social and are presented in Figure 1.2, which also offers a
environmental considerations play in the guide to some important GEM definitions and
long-term decision-making of entrepreneurs measurements.
in relation to new businesses. These questions GEM distinguishes between three distinct
are repeated in the 2022 APS (thereby allowing stages in the development of entrepreneurial
comparisons to be made), but also extended activity and therefore defines a related typology
by new questions about awareness of the UN for entrepreneurs in each stage. The Nascent
SDGs and whether these play a part in business Entrepreneur has actively devoted resources to
priorities and strategies. starting the business but the business has not yet
The volume of data collected by the APS allows paid wages or salaries (including to themselves)
key variables to be estimated and compared for a period of three months. The New Business
with confidence.4 These key variables can then Owner has started and is running a business and
be used to profile and track the entrepreneurial has paid wages or salaries for three months or
process: from having an initial business idea and more, but for less than 42 months, because those
perceiving related opportunities (conception), running a business and paying wages or salaries
to starting a business and beginning to pursue for 42 months or more are classed as Established
those opportunities (nascent entrepreneurship), Business Owners.
to transitioning the new startup into an A healthy and vibrant economy would have
established business, or in some cases towards enough entrepreneurs operating at each stage of
enterprise development to ensure that there is a
constant throughput of potential established and
4 Including tests of statistical significance and the
estimation of confidence interval. These are not high-growth businesses. Low levels of Nascent
FIGURE 1.2 ​
The entrepreneurial included in this Global Report for reasons of brevity. Entrepreneurs may indicate significant barriers to
process and GEM
indicators

EXITING
THE BUSINESS

TOTAL EARLY-STAGE
ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY (TEA)
POTENTIAL NASCENT OWNER-MANAGER OWNER-MANAGER
ENTREPRENEUR: ENTREPRENEUR: OF A NEW OF AN ESTABLISHED
opportunities, capa- involved in setting BUSINESS more than
bilities and intentions up a business (up to 3.5 years) 3.5 years)

CONCEPTION FIRM BIRTH PERSISTENCE

EARLY-STAGE ENTREPRENEURSHIP PROFILE


INDIVIDUAL ATTRIBUTES IMPACT
• Gender • Business growth
• Age • Innovation
• Motivation • Market scope
• Industry

30 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Anna Niszkács
Owner and Managing Director of Gerbeaud
Gasztronómia Kft. (Hungary)

Innovating in the midst of global disruption


Taking over a reputable family business in the
midst of a pandemic is no small undertaking. Just
ask Anna Niszkács, owner of Gerbeaud, one of
the best-known Hungarian confectionery brands.
Begun in 1858 as a stand-alone café, the Gerbeaud
group now includes multiple restaurants and other
hospitality services.

Prior to 2020, Gerbeaud had never needed to


shut down because of a global pandemic in its
over 160 years of operation. Anna, however, has
experienced a different reality ever since she took
over in February of that year. Essentially, she only
knows what it is like to own and manage a business
that is operating in the midst of disruption due
to global events. Once the pandemic emerged in
March 2020, all the thriving business’s units had
to close and Gerbeaud lost over 90% of its revenue
overnight. Difficult as these circumstances were, of necessity shortly after being obliged to terminate
Anna used them as an opportunity to innovate. in-person dining. When on-site service became
possible again in June 2021, Émile was able to
“The COVID-19 pandemic has been an
improve on previous years’ results thanks to its new
important multiplier for us and provided
delivery service. Just as the extreme pandemic-
us with the opportunity to rethink our
related disruptions were subsiding, Anna has been
well-established brands. During times of
forced to lead Gerbeaud through another global
peace and normalcy, leaders are reluctant to
disruption: the outbreak of the war in Ukraine (a
rethink their successful products.”
neighbour of Hungary).
An example is the Gerbeaud-owned restaurant
“I now see that the handling of the pandemic
Onyx, which opened in 2007 as a pioneer in fine
was an opportunity to prepare for the war
dining and had received two Michelin stars before
between Russia and Ukraine, inflation and the
the pandemic closed it down. The company took
rise in energy prices. COVID-19 was a disaster
this as an opportunity to launch a large-scale
for companies in the hospitality sector — we
professional development program.
are focusing on stabilizing the business. But
Another of the company’s units — Émile, a this does not mean we’re staying the same.
restaurant located in the residential area of Rather, we are looking to the future and
Budapest — launched a home delivery service out innovating even more boldly.”

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 31


new business development, while having too few business? It is also useful to policymakers, since
Established Business Owners may suggest that not not only do they get feedback on the relative
enough new businesses are surviving into maturity. conduciveness of their national business context
On the other hand, it may also point to a dearth of to promote entrepreneurship but the results of the
innovation and new ideas, or may suggest some study also enable benchmarking against other
barriers to the sustainable entry of new firms, national contexts.
restricting competition and consumer choice. New NES questions in 2022 focus on the pace
The most important GEM variable is the level of of recovery post-pandemic and the awareness,
Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA), application and prioritization of the SDGs.
or the proportion of the adult population that is Together, the APS and NES present, for each
starting or running a new business (including economy, a unique, comprehensive and detailed
both Nascent Entrepreneurs and New Business annual snapshot of national entrepreneurial
Owners).5 activity, and of the attitudes, experiences,
The second GEM survey is the National Expert activities and ambitions of the entrepreneurs
Survey (NES). Each year every GEM National Team themselves. The APS study also delivers an
invites at least 36 identified national experts6 to in-depth and evidenced account of the values,
complete an online survey in which they each ambitions and intentions of the majority of adults
assess a number of carefully defined statements in each economy who are not, at the moment,
relating to their economy’s entrepreneurial starting or running a business, even if many know
framework conditions. These conditions range someone who is.
from the availability of entrepreneurial finance The data that GEM collects in relation to
to the quality and affordability of physical business exit is also significant, since by exiting
infrastructure, and from government policies businesses entrepreneurs release resources,
to encourage entrepreneurship to the social including knowledge and experience, into the
support for that entrepreneurship. These wider business context. Many of the businesses
assessments are used to judge the quality of the that individuals exit continue in some form
context for entrepreneurship in each economy or another, so exit does not necessarily mean
and to calculate a National Entrepreneurship business closure. Finally, some of those not
Context Index (NECI), which allows the ranking starting a new business may nonetheless be
of economies in terms of their support and investing resources, usually funding, in someone
encouragement for entrepreneurship. This is else’s new business. This informal type of
useful to entrepreneurs since it answers a key investment is especially important in some
question: where are the best places to start a new economies, and will also be considered later.

1.5  GEM 2022 PARTICIPATING ECONOMIES


To present the data analysis in the 2021 GEM find themselves in the high-income group. For
Global Report, participating economies were this reason, in future reports the boundaries will
solely categorized by income, using World Bank require upward revision.
data on Gross Domestic Product per capita (GDP/ • Level A: economies with a GDP/cap of over
cap), but introducing, for the first time, GEM’s $40,000;
own definitions of low, medium and high income.
• Level B: economies with a GDP/cap of
These categories have been retained this year,
between $20,000 and $40,000;
and are set out below. The boundaries between
categories are, of course, arbitrary, and have been • Level C: economies with a GDP/cap of less
chosen to give three (reasonably) even groups than $20,000.
and to be consistent with last year. However, it
should be noted that rising incomes mean that an
increasing proportion of participating economies
6 That expertise may be in entrepreneurship, on the
economy, on access to finance, etc. The individual
expert can be from a wide variety of specialities: an
5 To avoid double-counting, minus the very few who are academic, a financial journalist, a venture capitalist,
doing both. etc. Each team utilizes a range of experts.

32 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


TABLE 1.1 ​
Level A Level B Level C
Economies in GEM
>$40,000 $20,000–$40,000 <$20,000 2022, categorized
by income group
Austria Argentina Brazil
(GDP/cap)
Canada Chile China
Cyprus Croatia Colombia
France Greece Egypt
Germany Hungary Guatemala
Israel Latvia India
Italy Mexico Indonesia
Japan Oman Iran
Lithuania Panama Morocco
Luxembourg Poland South Africa
Netherlands Puerto Rico Togo
Norway Romania Tunisia
Qatar Serbia Venezuela
Republic of Korea Slovak Republic
Saudi Arabia Taiwan
Slovenia Uruguay
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United States

Table 1.1 lists the economies participating in and parcel of the solution to the current global
GEM in 2022, divided into these three categories, economic challenges.
using World Bank data.7 These are the categories The combined total population of these
that will be used in presenting results, analyses 51 economies represent more than 64% of
and conclusions throughout this report. the global population.8 Level A includes 14
All the economies listed participated in both European economies, two in North America,
the APS and NES, with the exception of Italy and three Gulf States plus Japan, the Republic of
Argentina, both of which participated solely in the Korea and Israel. Level B economies are mostly
NES. Having 51 GEM participating economies is a from Latin America or Eastern Europe, plus
considerable achievement given current turbulent Taiwan and Oman, while Level C economies are
times. It is also a strong testament to the tenacity more widely spread, from Latin America, the
of GEM National Teams and their belief in the Middle East, East Asia and Africa. None are from
GEM project, as well as to the support of their Europe, despite European economies comprising
sponsoring bodies, most often policymakers and nearly a half of the 2022 GEM-participating
entities that perceive entrepreneurship as part economies.

7 World Bank data for GDP/cap (and population) was


accessed on 24 October 2022, giving estimates for 2021
(those for Iran and United Arab Emirates were for
2020). World Bank data may have been revised since
then. Taiwan is absent from World Bank data, so an
IMF estimate has been used instead. See https://data.
worldbank.org and https://www.imf.org/en/Home. 8 Estimated using World Bank data.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 33


1.6  THE IMPACT OF THE PANDEMIC ON HOUSEHOLD
INCOMES
Household income is an important, and broad, reporting a decrease in household income in the
measure of the pandemic’s impact. In 2020 and poorest economies, with the lowest proportions in
2021, a question in the APS asked individuals the richest — although with considerable variation
whether, for each of those years, the pandemic between countries. In Level C economies, the
had led “your household income to strongly share of adults still reporting a decrease in
decrease, to somewhat decrease, to show no household income due to the pandemic ranged
substantial change, to somewhat increase, or to from almost nine out of 10 in Togo to just a half
increase strongly”. This question was repeated in in Iran; in Level B the range was from three out
2022. of four in Mexico to one in five in Croatia, and in
Figure 1.3 shows that the economic impacts of Level A economies from two out of three in the
the pandemic were far from over in 2022. As in United Arab Emirates to less than one in 10 in
FIGURE 1.3 ​ the previous two Global Reports, the pandemic Norway. This high variation in impact may reflect
The impact of continues to hit those hardest who could afford a number of factors, such as the wide diversity of
the pandemic on it least, with the highest proportions of adults approaches to managing the pandemic, different
household income
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Strongly decrease Somewhat decrease Strongly increase Somewhat increase

50

40

30

20

10

0
% of adults 18–64

−10

−20

−30

−40

−50

−60

−70

−80

−90
Togo
Venezuela
Indonesia
India
China
Colombia
Egypt
Tunisia
Morocco
Guatemala
South Africa
Brazil
Iran
Mexico
Panama
Poland
Greece
Uruguay
Slovak Republic
Puerto Rico
Chile
Serbia
Oman
Taiwan
Romania
Hungary
Latvia
Croatia
United Arab Emirates
Saudi Arabia
Cyprus
Qatar
Spain
Israel
Republic of Korea
Canada
United States
France
Austria
Germany
Lithuania
Luxembourg
United Kingdom
Japan
Slovenia
Netherlands
Switzerland
Sweden
Norway

Level C Level B Level A

34 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Maxwell Peng
Founder of VMFi (Taiwan) “The pandemic pushed VMFi to evolve speech
translation services from offline only to online.
The power of pivoting We evolved to offer speech translation services
Maxwell Peng, an entrepreneur based in Taipei, for any offline event and online webinar at the
was passionate about bringing innovation to the same time.”
in-person event space when he launched VMFi in In addition to addressing concerns around COVID-19,
2020. The company’s 5G Blazing Fast AI Speech the product also addresses a challenge faced by
Translation System encourages multi-language those with hearing impairments:
visitors to attend the same event. Backed by
“We show both captions and subtitles. This
5G and AI technology, the scalable speech
can prevent overseas travellers and local
translation turnkey solution reduces dependence
staff both from COVID-19 infection, providing
on costly interpreters and radio technology
security without a language barrier. Our
during face-to-face meetings, conferences and
service can be deployed at any location in the
exhibitions.
world via wireless broadband service.”
As the pandemic halted all in-person gatherings,
As VMFi moves into the future, Maxwell can always
Maxwell knew he needed to pivot and create a
look back to a time period when a global disruption
digital solution:
necessitated a successful pivot.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 35


social and cultural factors affecting the reaction answers to the same question in both years can
of populations, and, importantly, the willingness be compared for these economies. In 26 of those
(and ability) of governments to introduce and 37, the proportion of adults reporting that the
sustain support packages for individuals and pandemic has decreased their household income
businesses. had fallen, the largest falls being in India (from
Amongst these 49 economies, Croatia in 98% to 74%) and in Canada (46% to 34%). The
particular stands out, with the second lowest largest increases were in Germany (from 21% to
proportion of adults reporting a decrease (just one 32%) and in Romania (21% to 34%). However,
in five — only Norway had less), and almost one in more generally, while the totals reporting a
two adults even reporting an increase in income, decrease are still high, the numbers selecting
by far the highest of the 49 economies. The next “strongly decreases” have gone down, and the
highest were the United States and South Africa. numbers selecting “somewhat decreases” have
Although Figure 1.3 presents a relatively bleak risen. This appears to indicate a sluggish shift
picture, there are some signs that it may be slowly to recovery despite the overall gloom implied in
improving. A total of 37 economies participated Figure 1.3.
in the GEM APS in both 2022 and 2021, and so

1.7  CONCLUSION
While the economic and social impacts of the positive trajectory promised great hope for the
global chaos created by the pandemic and the war future, but within a very short period has been
in Ukraine continue to reverberate throughout greatly jeopardized by the current volatility and
the global economy, many of those impacts have uncertainty, again exacerbating inequalities.
been amplified by the ensuing supply-chain In any case, while starting a new business will
difficulties and rapidly rising energy costs. In continue to be an option even in such challenging
these circumstances, to have so many economies economic contexts, there is a new wave of
participating in the 2022 GEM research program entrepreneurs, often operating informally in
is a considerable achievement. Credit is due developing economies, who now simply have to
to those national teams that carried out the earn a living through entrepreneurship because
research, sometimes under extremely difficult jobs are so scarce. However, these businesses
circumstances. Four of those economies share a are most unlikely to transform into value-adding
border with Ukraine (Hungary, Romania, Poland growth-oriented businesses for those economies.
and the Slovak Republic). The picture of how This year’s report presents analysis of large-
entrepreneurs are coping in these circumstances scale population survey results from 49 economies
will be developed in subsequent chapters. across the globe. All continents are represented
For now, suffice it to note that, as in 2021, in the participating economies except for the
the poorest economies continue to be worst Arctic, Antarctic and Australasia, although some
affected by the lingering impacts of the global are better represented than others. Nevertheless,
pandemic. The economic crisis stirred by the the results presented in this report provide a
war in Ukraine has not improved matters. The comprehensive and timely overview of the level
consequences are significant, bearing in mind and nature of early-stage entrepreneurship across
that, before the pandemic struck, extreme poverty the world, and an informative guide to social
rates had been steadily declining for over two attitudes and perceptions of entrepreneurship,
decades. The United Nations was confident about together with a careful expert assessment of the
achieving the eradication of extreme poverty, in entrepreneurial ecosystem in each participating
line with one of the aforementioned SDGs. This economy.

36 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


2
The Social and Cultural
Foundations of
Entrepreneurship
Stephen Hill and Jeffrey Shay

2.1  THE INFLUENCE OF SOCIETY AND CULTURE


Starting a business can be considered very much a assesses an economy’s social and economic
personal choice. How entrepreneurship is viewed, context in two important ways. The Adult
including whether it is seen as an attractive career Population Survey (APS) asks all individual
choice, depends in part on the social and cultural participants a number of questions about their
context of the individual. In the developed world, attitudes, actions and intentions. Some of the
it is very easy to assume that a common career results of these questions will be considered
path is to go from school to college, then on to and assessed in this chapter. The second way
a full-time job with a good employer. In the less that an economy’s context is assessed is via
developed world, where earning a living may be the National Expert Survey (NES), asking
much more difficult, working for yourself may national experts within that economy for their
seem a necessity. judgement of that economy’s environment
However, the role of social and cultural context with regard to entrepreneurship, including
is not just about the stage of development. The factors such as access to entrepreneurial
level of early-stage entrepreneurial activity varies finance, educational programs to develop
considerably, both within and between income entrepreneurship, and social support for those
groups. For example, high-income economies starting their own business. The results of the
like Canada and Saudi Arabia consistently NES are discussed in detail later in a separate
have much greater levels of entrepreneurial section (“The Context for Entrepreneurship”,
activity than equally high-income Germany and p. 105), but individual perceptions and national
Norway. Similarly, low-income Brazil and South framework conditions for entrepreneurship are
Africa typically have much higher levels than clearly interrelated.
low-income Morocco and Iran. These within- Global and regional contexts will also influence
income-level differences may reflect social mores attitudes and perceptions. The pandemic has
and cultural attitudes, such as how the collective changed, perhaps forever, the culture of using
good is viewed compared to individual success, digital technologies in accessing and delivering
and how people and groups weigh risk against information, products and services, and even
reward.9 influenced new forms of collaboration, like
So attitudes and perceptions are not solely working from home, online shopping, or fast food
intrinsic to the individual: they are shaped deliveries. These may be permanent shifts in the
and constructed by family and social values, ways that digital technologies are utilized and, in
themselves reflecting tradition and culture. GEM turn, perceived.
Meanwhile, economies and societies do
not stand still, so attitudes, expectations and
9 Sahasranamam, S., Nandakumar, M.K., Pereira, V., intentions also evolve. This chapter discusses
& Temouri, Y. (2021). Knowledge capital in social some of these changes, including some
and commercial entrepreneurship: Investigating the limited pre- and post-pandemic comparisons.
role of informal institutions. Journal of International
Management, 27(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.
Opportunities need to be recognized before they
intman.2021.100833 can be grasped, so the APS enquires about seeing

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 37


good opportunities to start a business locally, and in some economies. This can be a crucial source of
whether starting a business is easy. finance for new entrepreneurs in those economies.
Finally, investing in someone else’s new This chapter will consider the proportion of adults
business, known as informal investment, is an investing in someone else’s startup10 in 2022, and
important dimension of entrepreneurial activity the median level of investment for those that did.

2.2  THE RECOGNITION OF OPPORTUNITIES


Before examining opportunity recognition at almost nine in 10 adults, and the lowest level in
directly, there is another social and cultural Japan, just two out of 10.
dimension to consider. The perception of There is substantial variation in the share of
entrepreneurship as a viable career choice may adults knowing someone who has started a new
well be influenced by whether the individual business within income groups, with perhaps
personally knows someone who has recently some weak indication that rising levels of income
started a business. The answer to this question is reduce the likelihood of an adult knowing
not just about the level of entrepreneurial activity someone who has recently started a business. It
in a particular economy — it is also about the may be easier to know an entrepreneur in a small
positive (or negative) publicity, and other forms economy like Cyprus or Qatar, than in a large
of social reaction, increasingly expressed online, economy like Japan or Egypt, although the chart
given to those starting their own business. does include exceptions.
Figure 2.1 shows the proportion of adults in
each participating economy reporting that they
know at least one person who has started their
FIGURE 2.1 ​
Knowing someone own business in the past two years. Across all 49 10 The terms “starting a new business”, and “startup”,
who has started a economies, the highest level was in Saudi Arabia, are used interchangeably in this Global Report.
business in the last
two years (% adults)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

100

90

80

70
% of adults 18–64

60

50

40

30

20

10

0
Egypt
South Africa
Venezuela
India
Morocco
China
Togo
Colombia
Iran
Tunisia
Indonesia
Guatemala
Brazil
Greece
Taiwan
Latvia
Romania
Poland
Mexico
Hungary
Panama
Serbia
Oman
Slovak Republic
Uruguay
Puerto Rico
Croatia
Chile
Japan
Germany
Republic of Korea
Luxembourg
Spain
Norway
Canada
United Kingdom
Austria
Switzerland
Lithuania
Slovenia
Sweden
Netherlands
United States
Israel
France
United Arab Emirates
Qatar
Cyprus
Saudi Arabia

Level C Level B Level A

38 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Tatiana Pimenta
CEO & Founder, Vittude (Brazil)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2019

Democratizing access to mental health


services
Nearly a billion people around the world live with
a diagnosable mental disorder. Many do not
have access to effective care for various reasons.
According to the World Health Organization, Brazil
leads the world in anxiety cases and ranks fifth
for cases of depression. Public health support for
treatment remains low, so many Brazilians living
with mental health conditions are not getting the
care they need and deserve.

Tatiana Pimenta experienced this first-hand. A


successful business executive, Tatiana faced a
host of personal challenges in 2012. Anxious to
avoid a negative impact on her career, she sought
therapy, but this brought its own set of problems.
After frustrating and unhelpful sessions with
inexperienced psychologists, she finally found a
reputable practitioner. Said Tatiana:

“His office was 11 km away and traffic in São


Paulo is atrocious. It took nearly three hours Since its founding, Vittude has built the largest
to get there and back every time. I got to network of qualified psychologists in Brazil.
thinking, ‘Couldn’t it be easier to connect
In the past two years, Vittude’s annual revenue
patients with therapists?’ ”
has grown fivefold its and its total customer base
In 2016, she launched a company, Vittude, with an twentyfold. To date, it has served over 100,000
ambitious mission: to democratize access to mental members, and the number of psychotherapy
health services by removing the financial barrier to sessions has more than tripled year-on-year, as the
mental health care. As a B2B2C-driven marketplace, willingness to invest in employee well-being and
the company connects high-quality psychologists to development has been growing significantly.
individuals and corporations.
Today, Vittude serves over 70 enterprises, including
The platform combines behavioural science, AI SAP, L’Oréal, Saint-Gobain, Grupo Boticário and
technology and human interaction to optimize Banco do Brasil.
personal growth and professional development in
Tatiana said:
support of a person’s whole health, at work and in
life. With Vittude Match, the company is positioned “I’m very happy and grateful for all we have
to provide a highly personalized employee built in the past years. There is a lot of work
experience driving not only well-being but also to do concerning mental health awareness.
growth and peak performance. I strongly believe we have the opportunity to
positively impact millions of people.”
Vittude Match helps eliminate trial and error by
using machine-learning models to match each
employee to the most effective care.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 39


100

90

80

70
% of adults 18–64

60

50

40

30

20

10

0
Iran
Colombia
China
South Africa
Tunisia
Morocco
Venezuela
Egypt
Brazil
Guatemala
India
Togo
Indonesia
Hungary
Slovak Republic
Latvia
Greece
Serbia
Taiwan
Chile
Panama
Mexico
Uruguay
Croatia
Romania
Puerto Rico
Poland
Oman
Japan
Spain
Cyprus
Germany
Lithuania
Republic of Korea
United Kingdom
United States
Israel
Switzerland
Austria
France
Luxembourg
Slovenia
Canada
Netherlands
United Arab Emirates
Norway
Sweden
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 2.2 ​
In the next six
months, there will be Figure 2.2 compares the proportion of adults there are good opportunities locally in the same
good opportunities agreeing11 that, in the next six months, there will economy before the pandemic (2019) and after
to start a business be good opportunities to start a business locally. what is surely the full brunt of the pandemic
in my area
The highest level is again in Saudi Arabia (and (2022).
(% adults agree)
Source: GEM Adult
again almost nine out of 10), but now closely Figure 2.3 compares the proportions agreeing
Population Survey 2022 followed by Indonesia. Japan again has the lowest there will be good opportunities to start a
level (just one in eight). More generally, in all of business locally in 2019 and 2022 for the 37
the Level C economies, in nine out of 15 Level B, economies that participated in GEM research in
and in 10 out of 21 Level A economies, more than both years. Even if these proportions had changed
half of adults agree there are good opportunities in the same direction (which they didn’t), this
locally; but in five economies less than one-third analysis would be inconclusive, because neither
of adults agree with this (Japan, Spain, Cyprus, 2019 nor 2022 may be representative years.
the Slovak Republic and Hungary). Nevertheless, if changes of less than, say, an
It may be anticipated that the pandemic has arbitrary five percentage points are discounted
reduced the share of adults agreeing that there as small differences, the proportion of adults
will be good opportunities to start a business agreeing to good opportunities locally fell by
locally, either by reducing those opportunities more than this in 12 economies. These included
or by decreasing their visibility, or perhaps falls of 21 percentage points in the United States,
some combination of the two. One simple, but 18 in China and 15 in Poland. However, nine
inevitably inconclusive, way to assess this is economies had a proportion of adults agreeing to
to compare the proportion of adults agreeing good opportunities locally that had increased by
five percentage points or more, including Puerto
Rico (+25), Brazil (+21) and Saudi Arabia (+16).
11 APS questions like this ask respondents if, for some
statement, they strongly agree, somewhat agree, Inevitably inconclusive indeed. Even this limited
neither agree nor disagree, somewhat disagree or evidence makes it clear that the impact of the
strongly disagree. For brevity, this chart, and others pandemic on opportunity recognition has been
throughout this Global Report, combines “strongly
very diverse. In some economies, the pandemic
agree” and “somewhat agree” to present the
percentage of adults agreeing. may have heightened perceived opportunities,

40 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


% of adults 18–64 % of adults 18–64

0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100

Iran Iran
China
Colombia
Morocco
Colombia China
Tunisia South Africa
Brazil Morocco
Guatemala
Egypt

Level C
Level C
Venezuela

37 economies; % adults agree)


Togo Brazil
South Africa Guatemala

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022


Egypt
India
Indonesia
India Slovak Republic
Slovak Republic Latvia

Source: GEM Adult Population Surveys 2019 and 2022


Puerto Rico Greece
Latvia
Taiwan
Greece
Serbia Chile
Croatia Panama
Uruguay
Mexico
Taiwan
Romania Croatia

Level B
Level B
2019

Mexico Puerto Rico


Hungary Poland

FIGURE 2.4 ​In my country, it is easy to start a business (% adults agree)


Chile
Oman
Panama

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Oman Japan
2022

Poland Spain
Israel
Cyprus
Japan
Spain Germany
Germany Republic of Korea
Lithuania United Kingdom
Republic of Korea
United States
Cyprus
Austria Israel
France Switzerland
Canada
Luxembourg
Luxembourg
Level A

United States Slovenia

Level A
United Kingdom Canada
Switzerland Netherlands
Qatar
United Arab Emirates
Slovenia
FIGURE 2.3 ​In the next six months there will be good opportunities to start a business in my area (figures for 2019 and 2022,

United Arab Emirates Norway


Sweden Sweden
Norway
Qatar
Netherlands

41
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Yi Wang
Founder, Anban Tech (China)

The motivations of a serial entrepreneur


Some entrepreneurs are committed to finding a
solution to a problem by means of starting and
owning one company. Then there are individuals
like Yi Wang, a serial entrepreneur who has been
starting businesses since his student days and is
now involved with his seventh venture. The latest is
Anban Technology, founded in 2018.

“From the experiences with my other ventures,


I am deeply aware that software is swallowing
the world. With autonomous driving, people
will even hand over their lives to software.
Safety goes far beyond traditional information
security. The current old testing paradigm
relies on manual and static analysis that
struggles to cope with the expanding code focus more on innovation and practice, and
scale.” prevent software defects from being the
Achilles heel that threatens mankind.”
Anban Technology is addressing this tension. Since
its founding, the company has become a leader The results are thanks to his experiences in leading
in the commercialization of intelligent fuzzing, six other companies as well as his education at
a paradigm-shifting opportunity in the testing ShanghaiTech University.
field that is driving a productivity revolution in “It is not enough to have ideas. The School
software development. Recently, Anban Technology of Entrepreneurship and Management at
completed a financing of over 100 million yuan, ShanghaiTech University has served as my
which is the largest A round of financing in the field guide, expanding the boundaries of my
of software safety in China. cognition and the depth of my thinking, while
“We will continue to ensure software safety providing a solid theoretical support for my
in various industries, so that developers can entrepreneurial practice.”

and in others it may have had the opposite effect. opportunities and the percentage agreeing it
There is an evident need for further research into is easy to start a business. Once more, Saudi
the factors that influence opportunity recognition. Arabia has the highest level and Japan the
Even those who consider there will be good lowest. This relationship may be important
opportunities to start a business locally may for policymakers in creating environments in
hesitate if they think that starting a business which individuals perceive starting a business
is difficult. Figure 2.4 sets out the proportion as easy, perhaps as a result of favourable
of adults in each economy who agree that it is policies, support and training, because it is in
easy to start a business. This chart has a strong those environments that individuals see good
resemblance to the earlier Figure 2.2 (although opportunities for starting a business that will
note that, within income groups, economies ultimately employ people.
may be ordered differently), suggesting strong Within income Level C, Iran scored the lowest
correlation between the percentage seeing good in both charts, but here the percentage seeing

42 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


good opportunities was over twice that of those with both, while the Slovak Republic had less
agreeing it is easy to start. India had around than one in three. Finally, in Level A, Sweden had
four in five adults agreeing with both. In Level B more than three out of four agreeing with both,
Poland had more than seven out of 10 agreeing while Spain had less than a third.

2.3  CAN I START A BUSINESS?


The answer is clearly yes. Businesses start in they would not start a business because of fear
the most difficult circumstances, sometimes run of failure.
by people with very few resources of capital, As with knowing an entrepreneur, seeing
skills or experience. And, yes, some of these good opportunities and agreeing it is easy to
businesses succeed — but these are typically start a business, confidence in having the skills
few and far between. Seeing opportunities and experience to start their own business is
is important, as is believing that it is easy highest in Saudi Arabia, and lowest in Japan.
to start a business, or at least that obstacles However, in this case, agreement appears to
can be overcome. But even that may not be decline as income rises. In all economies in
enough if you don’t think you have the skills or Level C, a half or more of adults agree they have
experience to start a business, or if the fear of the skills and experience to start. This is also
failure prevents you from doing so. Both may true of 11 out of 15 Level B economies, but just
be cultural issues. Questions in the GEM APS 11 out of 21 Level A economies. Of course, the
explicitly address these issues. Figure 2.5 charts knowledge, skills and experience needed to start
the percentage of adults in each participating a business may vary by location. What Figure 2.5
economy who agree they have the skills and demonstrates, however, is wide variation in FIGURE 2.5 ​
I have the knowledge,
experience to start a business, while Figure 2.6 self-belief.
skills and experience
plots the percentage of those seeing good Figure 2.6 is a bit different, showing the to start my
opportunities (as shown in Figure 2.2) who agree proportion of those seeing good opportunities to own business
(% adults agree)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

100

90

80

70
% of adults 18–64

60

50

40

30

20

10

0
Iran
China
Egypt
Morocco
South Africa
Colombia
Brazil
Indonesia
Guatemala
India
Tunisia
Venezuela
Togo
Hungary
Taiwan
Slovak Republic
Poland
Greece
Latvia
Oman
Romania
Serbia
Mexico
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Chile
Croatia
Panama
Japan
Israel
Germany
Netherlands
Spain
Switzerland
Norway
Sweden
France
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Cyprus
Austria
United Kingdom
Republic of Korea
Canada
Slovenia
Qatar
United States
United Arab Emirates
Saudi Arabia

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 43


70

60

50
% of adults 18–64

40

30

20

10

0
Iran
Venezuela
Indonesia
Colombia
Togo
Tunisia
Guatemala
Morocco
Brazil
Egypt
India
China
South Africa
Oman
Hungary
Latvia
Serbia
Slovak Republic
Taiwan
Chile
Puerto Rico
Mexico
Uruguay
Panama
Croatia
Greece
Poland
Romania
Republic of Korea
Switzerland
Netherlands
Austria
United Arab Emirates
France
Norway
Sweden
Qatar
United States
Israel
Luxembourg
Germany
Lithuania
Slovenia
Spain
Japan
Cyprus
Canada
United Kingdom
Saudi Arabia
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 2.6 ​
You would not
start a business for start a business locally who would be deterred There is a clear need for more research into the
fear it might fail from doing so by the fear of failure. It is not perceived financial, social and psychological
(% of those agreeing unusual for new businesses to fail, so being impacts of business failure, and policies to
there are good
afraid of failing is a natural, if not universal, mitigate these that might better turn intentions
opportunities locally)
Source: GEM Adult
characteristic of those starting a business. The act into new starts.
Population Survey 2022 of starting a business demonstrates the ability to One consequence of the variation in all these
overcome those fears. factors may be differences in the proportion of
While Saudi Arabia has the highest share adults who expect to start a business in the next
of those seeing good opportunities who would three years. While intentions typically run ahead
be deterred by fear of failure (just under two in of actions (it is, after all, easier to intend to diet
three), the lowest proportion is in the Republic of than to diet!), the intention to start a business may
Korea, just less than one in five. be an indicator of the entrepreneurial intensity
Certainly, the fear of failure is a widespread of a given economy. Intending to start a business
obstacle to starting new businesses. In 37 out may be a necessary, if not sufficient, condition for
of the 49 participating economies, more than doing so.
40% of those who agree that there will be good Figure 2.7 shows the proportion of adults
opportunities locally would be deterred from expecting to start a business in the next three
starting a business by the fear of failure. Only years, and shows much more variation than the
three economies had less than one in three previous charts, both within and between income
deterred (Republic of Korea, Oman and Iran). levels. Brazil, Panama, Togo and Tunisia lead the
Finding ways to overcome this fear (for example, way, each with more than a half of their adults
by reducing the costs of failure) may be a quick intending to start. Across the income levels, more
way to increase startups in many economies. than one in three adults expect to start a business
Having scored so well on seeing opportunities in seven out of 13 income Level C economies, three
to start a business, believing it easy to start, out of 15 Level B and just two out of 21 Level A
and in seeing themselves as having the skills economies. Less than one in 10 adults share that
and experience to do so, Saudi Arabians are expectation in two Level C economies, five Level B
conspicuous at the top of the fear-of-failure table. and Five Level A economies.

44 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Andrés González-Silén
Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, medical services in vulnerable communities. In
Venemergencia (Venezuela) the midst of the 2017 Venezuelan migratory crisis,
Venemergencia provided peace of mind for those
Making a difference in the health care space leaving the country by being available for loved ones
Many entrepreneurs around the world start their remaining in Venezuela in cases of emergencies.
businesses with a motivation to help others. One “We made it possible through an online
such individual is Andrés González-Silén, founder of platform that allowed them to get a health
Venemergencia, an innovative Venezuelan company care plan with insurance for their families
working in the health care space. back home without the need of medical
“From an early age I was clear about my exams, few exclusions and without age limits.”
purpose: to serve other human beings just like With the learning from this experience,
my father and grandfather did as doctors.” Venemergencia created Asistensi in March 2020;
Originally from Venezuela, González-Silén had the it is operating this service in six countries that are
opportunity to complete his last years of high school susceptible to migration shocks.
in the UK. He opted against this. In conclusion, González-Silén said:
“I felt that good doctors were more needed in “I have always wanted to pursue my dreams
a place like my home country — Venezuela. I and serve as much as I can, following the
fulfilled my dream of becoming a Venezuelan steps led by great leaders.”
doctor in 2011 and started in a public hospital.”

These initial years as a doctor gave González-


Silén the opportunity to witness issues facing
the health care system. One concern was that
patients were visiting the hospital unnecessarily,
simply in the absence of other options. If these
patients were seen at home, better care could
be provided while generating cost savings.

González-Silén launched Venemergencia in


2005 so that patients could receive quality care
in the comfort of their own homes. By 2015,
Venemergencia had served 3.5 million patients
with a comprehensive approach of progressive
home-first health care that starts with real-time
telemedicine, home consults and ambulances.
It prevents up to 85% of unnecessary clinic visits.

“When patients can stay at home, it has a


dramatic impact on quality of life and leads
to significant cost savings.”

Venemergencia now employs over 550 people


and is considered a leader in the health care
sector. The not-for-profit company educates
paramedics and provides emergency

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 45


60

50

40
% of adults 18–64

30

20

10

0
South Africa
China
India
Colombia
Iran
Venezuela
Indonesia
Morocco
Guatemala
Egypt
Tunisia
Togo
Brazil
Poland
Romania
Greece
Slovak Republic
Hungary
Serbia
Taiwan
Mexico
Latvia
Croatia
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Oman
Chile
Panama
Japan
Austria
Norway
Germany
Spain
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Israel
United States
Sweden
Luxembourg
Canada
Lithuania
Slovenia
France
Netherlands
Cyprus
Republic of Korea
Saudi Arabia
Qatar
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 2.7 ​
Are you expecting
to start a business There is similar variation within each income Of the 49 participating economies, there are 14
in the next three group, with the share of adults12 expecting to in which more than three in 10 adults expect to
years? (% adults start a business in the next three years varying, start a business in the next three years. Despite
responding yes)
from less than one in 10 to more than four in 10, in making up almost a half of the GEM participating
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022 all three income groups. economies in 2022, none of these are from Europe.

2.4  INVESTING IN SOMEONE ELSE’S BUSINESS


Involvement in a new business can take many The GEM APS asks respondents whether, in
forms, indirect as well as direct. Starting a new the past three years, they have provided funds
business requires access to resources, including for a new business started by someone else. The
finance. It is tempting to picture the new startup percentage of adults responding positively is
as capital- and knowledge-intensive, in smart shown in Figure 2.8. While investing money in
new shared-space offices. The reality is usually someone else’s new business is clearly a minority
very different — businesses are often started activity, it is certainly significant in a small
on a shoestring, using whatever money can be number of economies. The percentage was highest
cobbled together from savings, overdrafts, credit in Chile, where 22% of adults had invested in
cards and, often, family, friends and colleagues. someone else’s new business, half as much more
Informal investment is the act of investing money compared to the next highest (14% in Guatemala).
in someone else’s new business, and is a very Only five of 49 economies had more than one in 10
particular form of entrepreneurial activity that adults investing in someone else’s startup (Saudi
may be driven by family loyalty, or by friendship, Arabia, Togo, Brazil, Chile and Guatemala). At the
just as much as by the expectation of future same time, 14 of the 49 economies had less than
returns. one in 40 adults investing in someone else’s new
business.
12 Strictly, this is the share of those adults not already Geographically, the highest levels were in three
engaged in entrepreneurial activities. Latin American economies (Chile, Guatemala

46 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


US$ % of adults 18–64

0
5
10
15
20
25

0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
South Africa
Togo Venezuela
Venezuela Morocco
South Africa Egypt
India India
Indonesia Colombia
Guatemala Indonesia
Colombia

Level C
China

Level C
Brazil Iran
Tunisia Tunisia
Morocco

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022


Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022
Brazil
Iran Togo
Egypt

FIGURE 2.8 ​Informal investors (% adults)


Guatemala
China
Serbia
Croatia
Romania
Mexico
Poland
Panama
Mexico
Uruguay
Puerto Rico
Romania
Hungary
Chile
Greece
Serbia
Croatia
Hungary
Slovak Republic

Level B
Oman

Level B
Oman
Latvia
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Taiwan
Poland
Uruguay

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Puerto Rico
Panama
Greece
Chile
Taiwan
Canada
Japan
France Israel
Sweden United Kingdom
Switzerland Republic of Korea
Lithuania Spain

FIGURE 2.9 ​Median amount invested ($US) by those investing in someone else’s new business
United States Germany
Spain Cyprus
Austria Lithuania
Germany Slovenia
Cyprus Norway
United Arab Emirates Austria
United Kingdom Canada
Level A

Level A
Slovenia Luxembourg
Netherlands France
Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates
Japan Netherlands
Qatar United States
Norway Sweden
Luxembourg Switzerland
Israel Qatar

47
Republic of Korea Saudi Arabia
ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Andrea Barber
Co-founder of RatedPower (Spain) maximizing clean energy’s potential through a
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2021 software as a service (SaaS) strategy. RatedPower
helps solar photovoltaic (PV) energy enterprises
Creating change in clean energy systems design and engineer utility-scale PV plants, thereby
Renewable energy can play a significant role in furthering a green transition to clean energy
mitigating the impact of climate change. However, systems. Andrea said:
designing and building large renewable energy “We developed cloud-based software to
plants is a time-consuming process. instantly carry out the design and engineering
Andrea Barber saw first-hand the complexity of of large-scale solar plants to accelerate the
designing and engineering large solar plants. transition to solar energy. We’ve always loved
Determined to do something about this, she thinking outside the box to make things more
co-founded RatedPower with the mission of efficient.”
digitizing the renewable energy industry and Despite concerns about the global economy,
RatedPower’s customers have not reduced their
software acquisition budgets. Massive deployment
of renewable energy is a critical part of most
governments’ responses to both COVID-19 recovery
packages and policies to fight the effects of the
war in Ukraine. This includes REPowerEU in the
European Union and the Inflation Reduction Act in
the United States.

Andrea noted:

“The fact is that diversifying the global


energy mix is key for both fighting climate
change by reducing greenhouse emissions
and guaranteeing world security. Renewable
energy — specifically solar photovoltaics — is
playing a role.”

In addition to the impact she is creating at


RatedPower, Andrea is also co-founder of Vostok
6, a podcast in Spanish that aims to raise the
visibility of women who are breaking barriers and
doing incredible work in different areas. Andrea is
positioned 30th in the current Choiseul 100 Spain
ranking of Future Economic Leaders and has
recently been chosen by Forbes as one of the 100
Most Creative People in Business from Spain.

48 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


and Brazil), two in Africa (Togo and Tunisia), and comparisons will be inevitably inconclusive. It
two in the Gulf (Saudi Arabia and Qatar). Within is particularly difficult to compare small values
Europe, the highest levels were in the north (as with the proportion of adults investing in
(Switzerland, Sweden and the Netherlands). someone else’s new business) in two periods,
While the percentage of adults investing in as changes in those values may appear to be
someone else’s new business is an important disproportionately large. Comparing medians
measure of the spread of this activity, the resources between two distributions is also fraught.
available to the new starts also depend on the Nevertheless, of the 37 economies participating
typical amount of this investment. The median13 in both GEM 2019 and GEM 2022, the percentage
amount invested in the startup per economy is of adults investing in someone else’s startup
shown in Figure 2.9, ranging from less than $100 increased in 16 economies and fell in the remaining
in Togo to over $22,000 in Israel and the Republic 21. Most of these changes were very small. Notable
of Korea. However, in the latter two economies, exceptions include Oman, where the proportion
the proportion of adults investing in someone fell from 10.4% to 3.5%, Colombia, where it fell
else’s startup was less than 3%. In Chile, with so from 7.7% to 2.6%, and Brazil, where the proportion
many people investing, the median amount was of adults investing in someone else’s business
$1,700. Perhaps the highest provision of informal actually increased, from 3.2% to 10.8%.
investment was in the Gulf, with 12% of adults in Turning to median informal investments, in
Saudi Arabia typically investing around $7,200 four (of the 49) economies this typical investment
each in a startup, and 9% of adults in Qatar more than doubled (Iran, Egypt, Puerto Rico
typically investing around $8,200 per startup. and Israel), and in four economies this typical
Finally, it is instructive to look briefly at investment more than halved (Slovak Republic,
informal investment levels before the pandemic Canada, Switzerland and Cyprus). Once again:
(2019) and in 2022, noting as before that these inevitably inconclusive indeed.

2.5  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


The personal decision to start a new business is good opportunities would not start a business
inevitably conditioned by the social and cultural because of fear of failure. Hence, the share
context in which that decision is made. An of adults expecting to start a business in the
awareness of local opportunities, confidence in next three years in these economies appears
one’s own abilities and perceptions of the ease severely constrained by the fear of failure.
of starting may all be important dimensions of Overcoming this fear — for example, through
that context, and may all be influences on that better knowledge of risk management techniques,
decision. mitigating the costs of failure through changes
In the figures showing the percentage of adults in insolvency regulations, or better promotion
agreeing there are good opportunities to start a of entrepreneurial success stories — could all
business, that they have the skills and experience contribute to an increase in startup rates.
to do so, and that starting a business is easy, Comparing the percentage of adults agreeing
the same economies recur towards the top of there are good opportunities to start a business
these scales, and these include Saudi Arabia, pre- and post-pandemic (i.e. 2019 and 2022)
Brazil, Qatar, Puerto Rico, the Netherlands and presents a mixed picture, as does comparing
Poland. However, in each of these economies, informal investment rates over the same period. In
around a half of those agreeing there will be terms of entrepreneurial perceptions and indirect
entrepreneurial activities, such as investing
money in someone else’s new business, it is clear
13 If investment per adult were arranged in ascending that some economies have fared much better,
order, the median would be the midpoint. The or suffered much less, than other economies.
median can be a better measure of central tendency Understanding the cause of these differences
in distributions where the average may be misleading
because of a small number of large values. In this
could be very important for policy development in
chapter the median investment is referred to as the the medium term.
typical investment, in order to distinguish it from the
average.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 49


3
Levels of Entrepreneurial
Activity Across the
Globe in 2022
Stephen Hill and Sreevas Sahasranamam

3.1  MEASURING ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY


The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) or running a new business. So, in each economy
research project was established more than GEM asks a large random sample of people,
two decades ago to do exactly that — monitor through the Adult Population Survey (APS), if
entrepreneurial activity across the globe, they are actively engaged in starting or running
providing a benchmark for each participating a new business while being very precise about
economy to allow comparisons with other what this means. There is no reason for anyone
economies, and through time. As noted to provide misleading answers because all
earlier, this is only possible if what is meant results are anonymized. Hence the APS captures
by entrepreneurship is defined and measured informal (unregulated) activity, beyond the reach
precisely and consistently. There are many of official data, as well as formal entrepreneurial
ways to measure entrepreneurship — such as activity. Anonymized APS data is submitted by
counting the number of new firm registrations, national teams in participating countries to the
or the number of people considering themselves GEM data centre, where it is checked and verified
to be self-employed. Both say something about for accuracy and consistency. The GEM data
entrepreneurship. But new firms may or may team produces key variables in exactly the same
not register, depending on the necessity and way for each economy, ensuring comparability.
cost of doing so, while regulations regarding The most important of these key variables is the
those registrations may differ by country. At the level of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity
same time, many people who regard themselves (TEA), or the proportion of the adult14 population
as self-employed, such as some taxi drivers, who are starting or running a new business. A
decorators and musicians, do not consider new business or startup15 is one that has paid
themselves to be running a business but rather wages or salaries, including to the owners, for no
just earning a living for themselves. more than 42 months. If the business continues
GEM approaches entrepreneurship from to pay wages and salaries beyond 42 months, it
a different perspective. According to GEM, is considered by GEM as Established Business
entrepreneurship is the personal act of starting Ownership (EBO).

3.2  WHERE IS ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY HIGHEST?


The levels of TEA and EBO across all 49 Colombia, Panama, Chile and Uruguay, followed
economies participating in the GEM APS in 2022 by high-income (Level A) United Arab Emirates
are set out in Figure 3.1.
The proportion of adults starting or running a
14 More precisely, and consistently, in GEM adult means
new business is highest in five Latin America & aged from 18 to 64, since it is these who are surveyed.
Caribbean countries from middle-income (Level B) 15 The terms “new business”, “new startup” and “new
and low-income (Level C) economies: Guatemala, entrepreneur” are all used synonymously to refer to
starting or running a new business.

50 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)
Established Business Ownership (EBO)

30

25

20
% of adults 18–64

15

10

0
Morocco
China
Egypt
Indonesia
South Africa
India
Venezuela
Iran
Tunisia
Brazil
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Romania
Hungary
Serbia
Slovak Republic
Oman
Mexico
Croatia
Latvia
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Chile
Panama
Spain
Japan
Norway
Austria
Luxembourg
Switzerland
Slovenia
Cyprus
Israel
Germany
Sweden
France
Qatar
Republic of Korea
Netherlands
Lithuania
United Kingdom
Canada
United States
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 3.1 ​
Total early-stage
and low-income Togo. All these have around one business in South Africa and Mexico. Table 3.1 Entrepreneurial
in four adults or more starting or running a new summarizes these differences by counting the Activity (TEA) and
business. At the same time, less than one in 20 number of economies in each category for each Established Business
Ownership (EBO)
adults were starting or running a new business income group.
(both % adults)
in Morocco or Greece, and less than one in 50 in Out of 13 income Level C economies, five Source: GEM Adult
Poland. had less than one in 10 adults starting a new Population Survey 2022
Figure 3.1 shows a negative association business, while another four had more than
between TEA rates and income level, but with two in 10 adults doing the same. Within the
considerable variation in TEA within each of same Level C economies, five had less than one
those levels. A similar but less dramatic picture in 20 adults owning an established business,
emerges from rates of EBO, highest at one in five while another four had more than two in
adults in the Republic of Korea, but with less 10 adults doing the same. Of the 15 Level B
than one in 50 adults owning an established economies, four had less than one in 20 adults

TABLE 3.1 ​
TEA: starting a new business EBO: running an established business
Number of economies
Less than one in More than two in Less than one in More than one in Total in each category
10 adults 10 adults 20 adults 10 adults number by income group

Level C 5 4 5 4 13

Level B 2 4 4 3 15

Level A 12 1 6 1 21

Total 19 9 15 8 49

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 51


owning an established business, while another a complex relationship between income levels,
three had more than one in 10 doing so. seeing opportunities, and feeling the necessity
Put another way, 19 of the 49 economies had to start a business. The net effect is a tangled
less than one in 10 adults starting or running a two-way relationship between the share of adults
new business in 2022. Of these 19, 12 were in the starting their own business and average income
highest income group. On the other hand, nine at an economy level. This tangle is well illustrated
of the 49 economies had one in 10 or more adults by Figure 3.2, which plots Gross Domestic
starting or running a new business. Just one of Product (GDP) per capita against TEA for the 49
these was a high-income economy. participating GEM economies in 2022, combining
These figures hint at some association between GEM APS data for TEA with World Bank data for
income and the proportion of adults starting or GDP per capita.
running a new business, an association that has While the scatterplot suggests some negative
been the subject of debate over time, including association between TEA and GDP per capita,16
in successive Global Reports. High-income this association is at best weak, and there are
economies certainly have more resources, high-income economies with relatively high
including social, educational and financial levels of TEA (including the United States, Saudi
capital, and may have a wider range of profitable Arabia and Canada), just as there are low-income
new business opportunities. But high-income economies with relatively low levels of TEA
economies also have more employment (Morocco and Egypt).
opportunities, so perhaps more to give up Recent years have seen increasing concerns
FIGURE 3.2 ​ by starting your own business. Low-income about the appropriateness of GDP as a measure
Levels of Total early- economies may have fewer business opportunities of well-being, including concerns about the
stage Entrepreneurial and less access to resources, but may also have
Activity and GDP
per capita
fewer income alternatives, and perhaps there is
Sources: GEM Adult less to lose by starting a business. There is also 16 The TEA–GDP/capita correlation coefficient is −0.235.
Population Survey
2022 and https://data.
worldbank.org

35

30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
United Arab Emirates
25
Togo

20 Brazil Puerto Rico


Saudi Arabia United States
% TEA rate

Tunisia Iran
Canada
Venezuela
15
Latvia United Kingdom
Mexico Croatia
Lithuania Netherlands
India Oman Republic of Korea
Serbia Slovak Republic Qatar
10 Hungary Israel
Sweden
Indonesia South Africa France
Romania Cyprus Slovenia Germany Switzerland Luxembourg
Egypt Taiwan Austria Norway
China Japan
5 Greece Spain
Morocco

Poland
0
0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 120,000 140,000 160,000

GDP per capita ($)

52 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Charlotte Wang
Founder of EQuota (China)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2020

Entrepreneurship and the United Nations


Sustainable Development Goals
Entrepreneurship is an essential driver of societal
health and wealth. It can address some of the
globe’s greatest challenges, such as the United
Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). One
of the many entrepreneurs around the world that
can speak to this is EQuota founder Charlotte Wang.
The company combines artificial intelligence and
big data to deliver energy efficiency solutions. Says
Charlotte:

“Sustainability means a responsibility for this


and the next generation.”

Charlotte was raised in a rural village in China


known for its coal mining. She saw how this activity
negatively impacted citizens’ health. From a young
age, she experienced issues with her sinuses and
breathing. At the age of 11, Charlotte moved with her
family near the coastline city of Dalian, China. While
she still continued to struggle with her sinuses,
Charlotte was able to enjoy a different environment access the data using an online dashboard and
with much cleaner air. Following the birth of her first have reported significant annual fatality decreases,
child, Charlotte decided to leverage her education electricity conserved, carbon emissions reduced and
at MIT in the United States and her experiences in money saved. The positive feedback from clients and
China to launch EQuota in 2014. the push to reduce carbon emissions are playing a
“It is truly our generation’s duty to improve role in Charlotte’s future thinking to tackle climate
our environment. After my time at MIT, I felt a change through data insights.
strong calling to be back in China.” “My plan is to use our service starting from
Charlotte sees EQuota’s services as similar to the energy demand side — manufacturers
personal fitness monitoring tools that provide and buildings — to transmission to energy
immediate, real-time feedback to facilitate healthier generation to get system-level change. Solving
choices. For large energy consumers, EQuota’s climate change and sustainability requires
non-intrusive technology gathers data from existing all of us to keep relentless focus. I truly believe
monitoring systems such as smart meters and that innovative technology provides different
applies artificial intelligence (AI) to analyse usage views for addressing climate change while
patterns and identify inefficiencies. Customers striving for harmony in the environment.”

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 53


35

30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
25 United Arab Emirates
Togo

20 Brazil Puerto Rico


United States
% TEA rate

Saudi Arabia
Tunisia
Iran Canada
Venezuela
15
Latvia United Kingdom
Mexico Croatia
Lithuania Netherlands
India Oman Slovak Republic
Serbia Qatar Republic of Korea
10 Hungary Germany
France Sweden
Indonesia South Africa Romania Cyprus Israel
Slovenia Switzerland
Egypt Norway
China Spain
Luxembourg
5 Greece
Morocco Taiwan Japan
Austria

Poland
0

0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0

Human Development Index (HDI)

FIGURE 3.3 ​
Levels of Total early-
stage Entrepreneurial distribution of income within economies, and and some economies with low levels of human
Activity and about the sustainability of those incomes.17 There development and high levels of TEA, such as
the UN Human are also questions about how closely GDP relates Togo and Guatemala. The association is not close,
Development Index
to people and their development. Alternative though, and there are also economies with high
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022 indicators of well-being are gaining credibility. levels of both TEA and HDI, such as the United
and https://hdr.undp.org One such alternative is the United Nations Human Arab Emirates and the United States, and others
Development Index,18 itself an aggregate of with low TEA and low HDI such as Morocco and
three components: human longevity, including China.
life expectancy; knowledge, including years of There is much work to be done, both in refining
education; and standard of living, including Gross measures and indicators of well-being and in
National Income per capita. These components establishing the relationship between those
are combined to produce a Human Development indicators and the level of entrepreneurship.
Index (HDI), located on a scale from 0 to 1. The distributed nature of the scatterplot
Figure 3.3 plots the association between TEA and poses multiple interesting questions for
HDI for the 49 economies in GEM 2022, using HDI entrepreneurship and well-being research.
figures from the United Nations website. Why do certain countries with high HDI
The association between HDI and national also have high entrepreneurship rates? One
TEA is negative:19 there are some economies potential explanation from existing research is
with high levels of human development and low the presence of informal cultural institutions
levels of TEA, such as Poland, Greece and Taiwan, in certain countries which augment formal

17 Van den Bergh, J.C.J.M. (2009). The GDP paradox. 18 See https://hdr.undp.org.
Journal of Economic Psychology, 30(2), 117–35. doi: 19 The correlation coefficient between TEA and HDI is
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2008.12.001 −0.333.

54 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


institutions facilitating human development an attractive choice? It is essentially a question of
to support entrepreneurial activity.20 Another whether those starting a new business consider
more radical question to ask, given the relatively themselves to be better off, either than they were
high clustering in the bottom-right corner of the before, or compared to those who are not starting
scatterplot is, when countries have conditions of or running a new business in countries with high
high HDI, is entrepreneurship not envisaged as HDI.

3.3  HOW HAS THE PANDEMIC AFFECTED LEVELS OF


ENTREPRENEURSHIP?
There are many ways to assess the impact of the straightforward. Figure 3.4 charts the level of TEA
pandemic on levels of entrepreneurship. Perhaps since 2019 (pre-pandemic) for the 32 economies
the most obvious is to compare the level of that participated in the GEM APS in each of the
entrepreneurship (percentage of adults starting four years since then.21
and running a new business) at different times If the principle of comparison is
before and during the pandemic. The consistency straightforward, the practice is rather less so. For
of the APS makes these comparisons relatively example, compare levels of entrepreneurship FIGURE 3.4 ​
in 2019 and 2022. If changes of less than one Levels of Total early-
percentage point are discounted, there are 12 stage Entrepreneurial
economies in which TEA was higher in 2022 than Activity each
20 Sahasranamam, et al., op. cit.; Stephan, U., Uhlaner,
year since 2019
L.M., & Stride, C. (2015). Institutions and social
(32 economies
entrepreneurship: The role of institutional voids,
participating in
institutional support, and institutional configurations. 21 Note that the number of economies represented
GEM for all four
Journal of International Business Studies, 46(3), is rather less than in 2022 alone, because not all
years; % adults)
308–31. doi: https://doi.org/10.1057/jibs.2014.38 economies participate every year.
Source: GEM Adult
Population Surveys
2019, 2020, 2021, 2022

2019 2020 2021 2022

40

30
% of adults 18–64

20

10

0
Egypt

Iran

Morocco

India

Colombia

Brazil

Guatemala

Poland

Oman

Greece

Croatia

Slovak Republic

Latvia

Panama

Chile

Spain

Germany

Slovenia

Sweden

Norway

United Kingdom

Switzerland

Luxembourg

Netherlands

Cyprus

Israel

Saudi Arabia

Qatar

Republic of Korea

United Arab Emirates

United States

Canada

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 55


in 2019, and 16 in which TEA had fallen. The There is also the important question of whether
largest percentage point increases were in the the war in Ukraine and subsequent changes in
United Arab Emirates (+9 percentage points), and energy costs have had any discernible impact
in Iran and Colombia (both +6), while the largest on levels of entrepreneurship worldwide. This
falls were in Chile (−10), Morocco (−7), and Israel implies looking at changes in the proportion of
(−4). There are four economies in which TEA fell adults starting or running a new business in 2022
each year from 2019 to 2022: Morocco, Poland, compared to 2021. Keep in mind that the APS is
Luxembourg and Cyprus, so for those economies it normally conducted in late summer, a period
may be reasonable to conclude that the pandemic coinciding with the early stages of the conflict in
adversely affected early-stage entrepreneurial Ukraine, so GEM data for summer 2022 is unlikely
activity. There are also five economies in which to include the total repercussions of that conflict.
the level of TEA fell at the start of the pandemic Of the 32 economies represented in Figure 3.4 in
(2019–2020), recovered somewhat to 2021, and both 2021 and 2022, 14 had increased proportions
then fell again in 2022 (India, Switzerland, Israel, of adults starting or running a new business,
the Korean Republic and Canada). There are also while 17 had a decrease in this proportion, with
economies in which the level of TEA has been one unchanged. The largest increases in TEA were
increasing, despite the pandemic? Is it possible in Colombia (+12 percentage points), the United
that, even in those economies, TEA would Arab Emirates (+9), and Iran (+8). All three are
FIGURE 3.5 ​
have increased further without the pandemic? significant oil and/or gas exporters. Meanwhile,
The percentage
of those starting Emerging research evidence points to the agility the largest decreases were in Qatar (−5) and
or running a new of entrepreneurs22 and the ecosystem23 in Canada (−4), also both energy exporters, although
business who think adapting to COVID adversities as being crucial. the latter on a minor scale. So there was no clear
doing so is more
difficult (includes
both somewhat and
much more difficult) 22 Stephan, U., et al. (2022). Act or wait-and-see? 23 Sahasranamam, S., & Soundararajan, V. (2022).
than one year ago Adversity, agility, and entrepreneur wellbeing Innovation ecosystems: What makes them
(% Total early-stage across countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. responsive during emergencies? British Journal
Entrepreneurial Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice. doi: https://doi. of Management, 33(1), 369–89. doi: https://doi.
Activity) org/10.1177/10422587221104820 org/10.1111/1467-8551.12553
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey,2022

90

80

70

60
% TEA rate

50

40

30

20

10

0
Morocco
Indonesia
Egypt
Venezuela
Colombia
Brazil
South Africa
Guatemala
Iran
Tunisia
India
Togo
China
Slovak Republic
Oman
Serbia
Poland
Croatia
Uruguay
Taiwan
Greece
Hungary
Romania
Latvia
Mexico
Puerto Rico
Panama
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Slovenia
Sweden
United Arab Emirates
Japan
Switzerland
France
Netherlands
Qatar
Israel
Norway
Germany
Austria
United Kingdom
Republic of Korea
Luxembourg
Canada
Lithuania
Spain
United States
Cyprus

Level C Level B Level A

56 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)
Established Business Ownership (EBO)

70

60

50
% of adults 18–64

40

30

20

10

0
Togo
Tunisia
Iran
China
Morocco
Egypt
Indonesia
Venezuela
Colombia
Guatemala
South Africa
Brazil
India
Hungary
Serbia
Greece
Slovak Republic
Croatia
Latvia
Poland
Taiwan
Uruguay
Oman
Mexico
Panama
Romania
Chile
Puerto Rico
Republic of Korea
Japan
Lithuania
Sweden
Austria
Norway
Switzerland
France
Cyprus
Spain
Germany
Netherlands
Slovenia
Israel
United Arab Emirates
United States
Luxembourg
Canada
United Kingdom
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 3.6 ​
The percentage
pattern of gains or losses in the share of adults lowest levels in the Slovak Republic and Saudi of those starting
starting a new business, although, as noted above, Arabia. The Slovak Republic borders Ukraine a new business
the 2022 APS may have been too early to capture but had the lowest proportion of entrepreneurs who agree that the
pandemic has led to
the full impacts. It is also worth noting that, while thinking it was more difficult to start a business
new opportunities
31 of the 32 economies had experienced changes in the entire 49 economy sample. The other three they wish to
in TEA, in 10 economies that change was less than countries bordering Ukraine had rather higher pursue, and the
one percentage point. levels, but were not out of line with other middle- proportion of those
running established
So the evidence is mixed on whether either income economies.
businesses who
the pandemic or the war in Ukraine has had an A recurring theme of Global Reports throughout are pursuing such
impact on the share of adults starting or running the pandemic has been the ability of many opportunities
a new business. Another area that both may entrepreneurs to see new business opportunities (% Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial
have impacted is the attitudes and perceptions of in adversity. In the early days of the pandemic,
Activity and
those adults who are starting or running a new those opportunities were focused on areas like % Established
business. Those impacts may have been positive making personal protective equipment, local Business Ownership)
or negative. The GEM APS asks those identified delivery services, or educational or fitness Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022
as starting or running a new business whether programs online. As the pandemic has continued,
starting a business is more difficult than one year many opportunities have become less obvious,
ago, with results shown in Figure 3.5. such as advising on career changes, producing
There was widespread, though not universal, online content, or providing minor medical
agreement that starting was more difficult, agreed services that have become increasingly difficult to
by more than half of adults in 9 out of 13 Level access. Questions in the APS ask those starting or
C economies, 3 out of 15 Level B, and 4 out of running a new business whether the coronavirus
21 Level A economies. The proportion agreeing pandemic has provided new opportunities that
reduced slightly with income. The highest levels they wish to pursue, and asked Established
were in China, Togo, Chile and India, with the Business Owners whether the pandemic has led

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 57


to new opportunities that are currently being twice the share of new entrepreneurs agreed
pursued (Figure 3.6). Note that, while the two sets that they had new opportunities because of the
of responses are presented side by side in the same pandemic than owners of established businesses:
chart, expressing a wish to pursue opportunities is Oman, Cyprus, Japan and the Republic of Korea.
probably a lot easier than actually doing so. Though Korea had the highest EBO rate (see
Given this caveat, it is perhaps not surprising Figure 3.1), there are massive differences in the
that, in all but four of the 49 economies (the perceptions of new opportunities because of the
United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Tunisia and Togo), pandemic, with five new entrepreneurs agreeing
the share of those starting a business who agree to this for every established business doing the
the pandemic had led to opportunities they same.
wished to pursue was higher than the share of More than half of new entrepreneurs saw
those running established businesses who were pandemic-led opportunities in six of the 13 Level
already pursuing such opportunities. Conversely, C economies, six of the 15 Level B economies and
there were four economies in which more than seven of the 21 Level A economies. Meanwhile,

ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Vitja and Marjana Sikošek


Co-founders of Vitjashop d.o.o. (Slovenia) well-being and appearance. It offers comprehensive
solutions for achieving goals through dietary
How government programs can propel changes and optimization of trace elements in the
entrepreneurs body.
Vitja Sikošek has loved nature and exercise ever Fulfilling this childhood dream has been made
since he was a little boy. He now has the opportunity possible thanks in part to a government program.
to incorporate his hobbies and passion into his work Vitjashop d.o.o. was incubated within the scale-up
having co-founded Vitjashop d.o.o. together with his program of Venture Factory, made possible by
wife Marjana. SPIRIT Slovenia. The company received a convertible
loan from the Slovene Enterprise Fund and joined
The company runs the vitja.si website, which raises
the startup Plus program in 2020. Today, Vitjashop
awareness about the importance of health, fitness,
d.o.o. markets its own and other innovative products
and has built a large community of trusting
customers.

According to Vitja, he decided to become an


entrepreneur because he truly enjoys working
on his hobby and appreciates the freedom to
work in different places, including summers by
the seaside. He inspired Marjana to become an
entrepreneur as well and join the company as
a co-founder. Marjana and Vitja say that they
complement each other perfectly in their work
and are like yin and yang. What one lacks, the
other makes up for. They say:

“Entrepreneurship allows us to live a fulfilled


life. It is like a never-ending game. The work
never ends, but if you love what you do, you
are happy to do it even on holidays, weekends
and wherever you are.”

58 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


there were three economies in each income level Established Business Owners pursuing pandemic
in which less than one in five new entrepreneurs opportunities (India and Brazil), while there were
saw pandemic-led opportunities to pursue. three economies in each income level with less
Established Business Owners were less optimistic: than one in five Established Business Owners
just two economies had over half of their pursuing pandemic opportunities.

3.4  IN WHAT SECTORS ARE NEW BUSINESSES STARTED —


AND DOES THIS MATTER?
The choice of the sector in which to start a Most new owners start businesses in areas
business is important, not only to that business in which they already have some knowledge or
but to the economy more widely. It is easier experience, including established networks or
to start a business in a sector that is growing, role models to follow. Entry is usually easiest
and easier to attract customers who are new to where there are fewest entry barriers and lowest
the sector than to entice customers away from costs, in personal services such as taxi-driving,
their established suppliers. Sectors differ in the decorating or small-scale retailing, or in low-level
resources required to start a business, including business services such as delivery or office
knowledge and capital, and in the barriers to new cleaning. Unfortunately, the same factors that
entry, such as market restrictions or economies facilitate easy entry, such as low startup costs, FIGURE 3.7 ​
Business services
of scale that impose a cost penalty on the new, also magnify competition, so margins are typically
and consumer
small-scale producer. New or growing sectors very low and failure rates high. This can be an services as a
attract resources away from sectors that are important part of the explanation of why the ratio percentage of
declining, and the entry of new businesses (and of new to established businesses can be very high Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial
the exit of old businesses) are important parts of in environments in which few new businesses
Activity (% TEA)
this process of structural change. survive long enough to become established. GEM Adult Population
Survey 2022

Business-oriented services Consumer-oriented services

90

80

70

60
% TEA rate

50

40

30

20

10

0
Indonesia
Togo
India
Venezuela
Guatemala
Tunisia
Egypt
South Africa
Colombia
China
Morocco
Iran
Brazil
Mexico
Panama
Taiwan
Serbia
Oman
Uruguay
Chile
Greece
Poland
Romania
Puerto Rico
Slovak Republic
Hungary
Latvia
Croatia
Saudi Arabia
Republic of Korea
United Arab Emirates
Lithuania
United States
Cyprus
Qatar
Germany
Netherlands
Sweden
Canada
France
United Kingdom
Austria
Slovenia
Switzerland
Spain
Norway
Luxembourg
Japan
Israel

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 59


Entry is harder, but prospects are probably tourism sectors. On the other hand, in 40 of the
better, in sectors requiring high levels of 49 countries participating in the 2022 GEM APS,
capital and/or specialist knowledge, such as consumer plus business services constituted more
technology-intensive goods or services, which than two out of three new starts.
are easily differentiated and therefore attract Figure 3.7 shows consumer and business
premium prices. Many of these are products services as a percentage of TEA. Consumer
or services for businesses, rather than for services made up 88% of startups in Saudi Arabia
consumers. There are, of course, other sectors, and Indonesia, 78% in Guatemala and 75% in
such as resource extraction and processing, Mexico, compared to just 31% in Norway and
or agriculture, but these tend to rely on the Slovenia and 33% in Croatia. Business services
specific natural resource endowments of ranged from just 2% of starts in Indonesia to over
particular economies. Another important sector 43% in Israel. There were just three economies in
is transport, usually dominated by large existing which the percentage of starts in business services
producers and typically offering little attraction equalled or exceeded that in consumer services:
to the new entrepreneur. Croatia, Slovenia and Norway.
The focus of this section is on the two broad More generally, there are three or more
sectors of consumer services and business new businesses in consumer services for each
services. Of the 49 economies in GEM 2022, one in business services in 12 out of 13 Level C
there were just three (Togo, Tunisia and Egypt) economies, seven out of 15 Level B, and just three
where consumer plus business services together out of 21 Level A economies. High-income Saudi
accounted for less than 60% of new starts. Arabia is a notable exception by having, in 2022,
Togo’s economy has large mining and agriculture more than 20 new consumer services businesses
sectors, while Tunisia has the same plus oil and for every new one in business services, a ratio
tourism. Egypt is reliant on its agricultural and only exceeded by low-income Indonesia.

3.5  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


GEM is precise and consistent in measuring others have fallen could have important policy
entrepreneurship, defined as the act of implications. Comparisons over the past two years
starting or running a new business. Early-stage present a similarly mixed picture, making any
entrepreneurship levels across the 49 economies impacts of the conflict in Ukraine, and subsequent
participating in the GEM APS are highest, at price changes, difficult to discern at this early stage.
more than one in four adults, in five Latin Among those starting or running a new
America & Caribbean economies, and lowest, business in 2022, there was widespread agreement
at less than one in 20 adults, in Poland and two that doing so was more difficult than a year
Mediterranean economies. However, there is earlier, particularly in low-income economies.
considerable variation in these proportions across More positively, there was also broad agreement
and within income levels. that the pandemic had led to new opportunities to
As in previous Global Reports, the data show pursue, though a little less so among established
a negative association between average incomes businesses.
(measured by GDP per capita) and levels of New starts continue to be concentrated on
TEA, though with many counter-examples. This consumer services, although this concentration
year, for the first time, GEM has considered an generally falls as income level rises. Consumer
alternative measure of well-being, the United services can be fiercely competitive, with low
Nations Human Development Index (HDI), which margins and little sustainability, so a focus on
also reveals some negative association with TEA. consumer services may be related to having
Levels of entrepreneurial activity across the high numbers of business starts relative to
pandemic period reveal a very mixed picture, numbers of established businesses since few of
with a number of economies experiencing a fall those starts survive to maturity. Encouraging
in TEA, but with a similar number experiencing new entrepreneurs to look beyond easy-entry
an increase over the same period. Analysing and sectors could help them to develop more durable
understanding why some have increased while businesses.

60 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


4
Entrepreneurial
Motivations and
Responsibilities
Stephen Hill and Fatima Boutaleb

4.1  INTRODUCTION: A WORLD OF CHANGE


There are many reasons why individuals choose is easy to perceive the future as darker than before,
entrepreneurship. The personal decision to start as the climate warms, opinions polarize and truth
a business can be the product of a single burning becomes harder to find. In the face of this — as
desire, such as for autonomy after working for noted earlier — starting a business is a victory for
someone else, or maybe the result of multiple confidence, that triumph of hope over experience.
motives, including seeking a personal fortune, Certainly, the world is changing. But people do not
securing a career or perhaps generating at least have to be passive spectators of change. Starting a
some income when there are few alternatives. business is one of the few ways an individual can
Some families are serial or generational become a sailor in that sea of change, mastering
entrepreneurs, so starting a business can be an their destiny and perhaps nudging the world in a
expected career choice. Still others care less about slightly better direction.
wealth or family traditions: they are starting This chapter will look not only at the
a business because they feel a responsibility motivations of the person starting a business,
to change the world, to make it better, more and there is often more than one, but also at
inclusive or more meaningful. All of these are what those who are starting businesses see
perfectly valid reasons in a world where there is as their responsibilities, particularly to social
little certainty and still less reassurance. well-being and to the environment. As the global
A changing world is nothing new. Many of these economy begins to recover from the pandemic,
changes are positive, such as more inclusion, less new opportunities emerge to live and work
discrimination, more awareness of individual differently, and this applies as well to burgeoning
choice and less pressure to conform. Starting a entrepreneurs, many of whom are managing to be
business is no longer chiefly the prerogative of the profitable while also contributing to a fairer, more
wealthy or the well educated. At the same time, it equal and more sustainable society.

4.2  CHANGING THE WORLD


Whatever the aspirations of the new entrepreneur new entrepreneurs saw it. The Adult Population
might be, in 2022 they had to be pursued in a Survey (APS) asks those starting or running
global economy that had been showing signs of a new business if, compared to one year ago,
recovery after the pandemic and was then subject their growth expectations are lower, the same
to ongoing supply-side difficulties and rising or higher.24 The results for 2022 are shown in
prices before these were magnified by the war Figure 4.1.
in Ukraine. It would be reasonable to assume
that expectations for business growth, for those
starting a business in 2022, would be lower than
a year earlier. Yet that was not, in general, how 24 In this case, lower includes both “much lower” and
“somewhat lower”.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 61


70

60

50

40
% TEA

30

20

10

0
Brazil
Venezuela
Guatemala
Colombia
Indonesia
South Africa
Egypt
Iran
Morocco
India
Tunisia
China
Togo
Serbia
Uruguay
Hungary
Puerto Rico
Oman
Taiwan
Croatia
Mexico
Romania
Poland
Panama
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Chile
Greece
Japan
Norway
Slovenia
Saudi Arabia
Israel
Sweden
Netherlands
Qatar
United Arab Emirates
France
Switzerland
Cyprus
Lithuania
United States
Canada
United Kingdom
Germany
Luxembourg
Spain
Austria
Republic of Korea
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 4.1 ​
The proportion
of those starting Less than a quarter of new entrepreneurs seven from Europe, two from Africa, along with
or running a new reported lower growth expectations than a year Uruguay, Canada and the United Arab Emirates,
business and earlier in three Level C economies, five Level B suggesting little change. But there is another
reporting lower
and 11 Level A, suggesting growth expectations group of 11 economies for which the difference
growth expectations
than a year ago fall slightly with income level. In just five is 10 percentage points or more, implying
(% Total early-stage economies — Togo, China, Tunisia, India and the substantial change. All of these 11 economies
Entrepreneurial Korean Republic — over half of new entrepreneurs had seen the percentage of new entrepreneurs
Activity)
had lower growth expectations than a year earlier. with lower growth expectations fall, sometimes
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022 Given the global economic turbulence of dramatically. Examples include India (from 81%
2022, it may be useful to compare the growth to 52%), Poland (57% to 31%) and Iran (62% to
expectations of new entrepreneurs in 2022 to 45%). There is no obvious connection between
those of new entrepreneurs a year earlier, with all 11, since all regions and all income groups
this data available for the 38 national teams that (including three Level A) are represented. At the
participated in the GEM APS in both 2021 and other end of the scale, 15 economies saw increases
2022. That comparison is shown in Figure 4.2. in the proportion of new entrepreneurs with lower
These economies fall into two distinct groups. growth expectations, the highest being the United
In 12 economies, the difference between 2021 Kingdom (+10 percentage points), followed by
and 2022 is less than five percentage points: Romania and Spain (each +9).

4.3  WHY START A BUSINESS?


Since 2019, the GEM APS has asked those starting • To continue a family tradition;
or running a new business whether they agreed • To earn a living because jobs are scarce.
with the following four defined motivations:
Entrepreneurs can somewhat agree or strongly
• To make a difference in the world; agree with each motivation — and many do so.
• To build great wealth or very high income; The proportions of those starting or running

62 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


2021 2022

90

80

70

60

50
% TEA

40

30

20

10

0
Brazil
Guatemala
Colombia
South Africa
Egypt
Iran
Morocco
India
Uruguay
Hungary
Oman
Croatia
Romania
Poland
Panama
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Chile
Greece
Japan
Norway
Slovenia
Saudi Arabia
Israel
Sweden
Netherlands
Qatar
United Arab Emirates
France
Switzerland
Cyprus
Lithuania
United States
Canada
United Kingdom
Germany
Spain
Republic of Korea
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 4.2 ​
Expectations of
a business, and agreeing25 with either of the small. The motivation “to build great wealth or lower growth for
first two motivations are shown in Figure 4.3, very high income” was as popular in high-income new entrepreneurs:
and those agreeing with the third or fourth as in low-income economies, agreed by more than comparison
between 2021 and
motivations in Figure 4.4. three out of four of those starting or running a
2022 (38 economies;
The proportion of entrepreneurs agreeing with new business in five Level C economies and five % Total early-stage
the motivation “to make a difference in the world” Level A. Only five economies had less than 40% of Entrepreneurial
in 2022 generally declined with income level, with their entrepreneurs agreeing with this motivation. Activity).
Source: GEM Adult
rather less agreement in Level A than in B or C, Interestingly, all were in Europe. Last year’s
Population Surveys
but not by much. More than seven out of 10 new Global Report noted that “wealth generation 2021, 2022

entrepreneurs agreed with this motive in four out remains a formidable driver of entrepreneurial
of 13 Level C economies, two out of 15 Level B and activity”. Results from the 2022 GEM APS offer
just one out of 21 Level A economies. The highest strong confirmation of this assessment.
levels of agreement were in Romania, Guatemala, The motivation “to continue a family
India and South Africa, dispelling any notion that tradition” continues to be important in a
making a difference is only a motivation for the minority of economies, especially low-income
well-off. The lowest levels of agreement were in ones. This motivation was agreed with by over
the Republic of Korea, Morocco and China. half of the new entrepreneurs in three Level C
The proportion of new entrepreneurs agreeing economies, but just one Level B and one Level A.
with the motivation “to build great wealth or Conversely, this was agreed by one in four new
very high income” was generally a more popular entrepreneurs or less in two Level C economies,
choice than “to make a difference in the world”, five Level B, and 11 Level A economies. The
with a higher proportion agreeing in 34 of the 49 highest agreements were in low-income
economies, although the differences were usually India (69%) and high-income Saudi Arabia
(62%), although Saudi was an anomaly in the
high-income group, which provided the lowest
levels of agreement in the Republic of Korea
25 Throughout the chapter, agree includes both
“somewhat agree” and “strongly agree”. (5%) and Switzerland (14%).

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 63


% TEA % TEA

64
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Morocco Morocco
Iran China
China Tunisia
Togo Iran
Indonesia Colombia
Venezuela Indonesia
Tunisia Togo

Level C
Level C
Colombia Venezuela
Brazil Egypt
South Africa Brazil

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022


Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022
Guatemala South Africa
Egypt India
India Guatemala

(% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)


(% Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)
Poland Poland
Hungary Serbia
Serbia Greece
Latvia Slovak Republic
Taiwan Latvia
Croatia Oman
Uruguay Uruguay

“To continue a family tradition”


Chile Croatia
“To make a difference in the world”

Puerto Rico Taiwan

Level B
Level B
Slovak Republic Chile
Oman Hungary
Greece Mexico
Romania Panama
Panama Puerto Rico
Mexico Romania
Republic of Korea Republic of Korea
Switzerland France
Sweden Japan
Israel Israel
United Kingdom Austria
Austria Spain
Spain Lithuania
France Germany
Norway Sweden
Lithuania Cyprus
Netherlands Netherlands

Level A
Level A

Cyprus Qatar
Japan Norway
“To earn a living because jobs are scarce”

Slovenia Slovenia
“To build great wealth or very high income”

FIGURE 4.4 ​Agreement with motivations “to continue a family tradition” and “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”
Qatar United Kingdom
Germany United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates Luxembourg
FIGURE 4.3 ​Agreement with motivations “to make a difference in the world” and “to build great wealth or very high income”

United States Switzerland


Luxembourg Canada
Canada Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia United States

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


The motivation “to earn a living because jobs by under a half of new entrepreneurs in no Level
are scarce” was more popular, although that C economy, just one Level B economy, but in 10
popularity declined with income level. This Level A economies.
motivation was agreed with by over three out of Recall that “to build great wealth or very
four new entrepreneurs in 11 Level C economies, high income” had been equally popular in
four Level B and just one Level A economy, and both low-income and high-income economies.

ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Gilles Suard
Founder, Almighty Tree (Switzerland)

How educational experiences can help


inspire and inform future entrepreneurs
GEM’s Adult Population Survey asks respondents
about their highest level of educational attainment.
A great example of someone who used their
educational experiences to launch a company
is Gilles Suard, founder of Almighty Tree and a
graduate of the School of Management Fribourg
(HEG-FR), University of Applied Sciences and Arts
Western Switzerland (HES-SO).

The mission of Almighty Tree is to act against


climate change, create a cleaner environment, and
raise awareness about the role of business and the
general public about carbon emissions. In response,
the company plants trees in Switzerland and abroad.

“On one hand, my education inspired me


to launch a business and, on the other
hand, it prepared me to face the challenges
associated with such an adventure.”

During Gilles’ studies (MSc BA, major in


entrepreneurship), he was exposed to success
stories, entrepreneurs’ presentations/lectures,
case studies on entrepreneurship and innovation, During his studies, he took part in Venture In Action,
company visits, and the entrepreneurship ecosystem a project that allowed students to launch a real
in Boston. business. He went through all the steps needed to
start a new business. He pitched an idea, created
“Such action-oriented activities inspired me,
a team, tested and challenged the original idea,
influenced my career choices and reinforced
launched a go-to-market strategy, and truly lived an
my deep desire to be an entrepreneur. I also
authentic entrepreneurial journey. In the process, he
received the appropriate knowledge for
saw first-hand the importance of perseverance.
execution, from idea to the market. I was
able to learn about the wide spectrum of In conclusion, Gilles said:
fields needed to launch a business, such as
“All my educational experiences informed me
marketing, finance, law, growth management
about how hard it is at the beginning of a
and leadership.”
venture and taught me how to keep going.”

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 65


A brief inspection of Figures 4.3 and 4.4 agreement with “to earn a living because jobs
shows that “to earn a living because jobs are are scarce” had declined with income. None
scarce” typically had higher agreement than of this is surprising, given that jobs are likely
“to build great wealth or very high income” in to be scarcer in low- compared to high-income
low-income economies, the two being roughly economies.
the same in middle-income economies, but “to If Figures 4.3 and 4.4 contain a surprise, it is
build great wealth or very high income” was that “to make a difference in the world” had, on
the more popular of the two motivations in the whole, more agreement among low-income
high-income economies, largely because the economies than in high-income economies.

FIGURE 4.5 ​
4.4  BECOMING A DIGITAL WORLD
The proportion The pandemic has led to substantial changes The pre-pandemic gentle drift towards online
of those starting
in the ways that we live and work, not least in transactions became a torrent for both consumers
or running a new
business, or running how business is conducted. This provides an and producers, a wave that shows little sign of
an established opportunity to examine digitalization as a tool for abating. To monitor the impacts of online changes
business, who recovery, as businesses adopt digital technology on new entrepreneurs, the 2021 APS asked both
expect to use more
to gain a competitive advantage and to enhance those starting a new business and those running
digital technologies
to sell their products performance-related outcomes such as the
or services in the pursuit of new opportunities — in particular,
next six months opportunities emerging with the pandemic. 26 See, for example, Samsami, M., & Schøtt, T. (2022).
(% Total early-stage Past, present and intended future digitalization
Digitalization is global but highly unequal,
Entrepreneurial around the world: Leading, catching up, forging
Activity and with a digital divide evident among societies.26
ahead, falling behind. Naše Gospodarstvo/Our
% Established However, digitalization is commonly perceived Economy: Journal of Contemporary Issues in Economics
Business to be a beneficial means for creating competitive and Business, 68(3), 1–9. http://ng-epf.si/index.php/
Ownership). ngoe/issue/view/48
advantages.
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) Established Business Ownership (EBO)

90

80

70

60

50
%

40

30

20

10

0
India
Togo
China
South Africa
Tunisia
Iran
Indonesia
Colombia
Morocco
Egypt
Venezuela
Guatemala
Brazil
Poland
Serbia
Slovak Republic
Hungary
Romania
Latvia
Greece
Croatia
Oman
Taiwan
Uruguay
Chile
Puerto Rico
Mexico
Panama
France
Lithuania
Switzerland
Sweden
Netherlands
Austria
Germany
Republic of Korea
Spain
Norway
Israel
Slovenia
Cyprus
Japan
Luxembourg
Canada
Qatar
United States
United Kingdom
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

66 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Amr AboDraiaa
CEO of Rology (Egypt) where they are from. Adopting the gig economy
model, Rology’s network now exceeds over 100
Creating jobs while addressing the shortage radiologists in addition to 50 full-time employees
of radiology professionals working in Egypt and Kenya. Said Amr:
Radiologists, in their use of medical imaging, play an “We are a two-sided platform, so the more we
important role in diagnosing and treating injuries grow and there is need for our services, the
and diseases. However, there aren’t enough of these more we create job opportunities.”
professionals in many African countries. Physicians
Rology was well ahead of the curve when it came
are increasingly relying on radiology scans for their
to working remotely. Therefore, when the COVID-19
diagnoses, but the number of radiologists is growing
pandemic impelled health care facilities to adopt
at a much slower pace. In addition, radiology has
digital solutions, Rology was well positioned to
different sub-specialties. It is very difficult for a
address the demand.
hospital to cover all of these sub-specialties and
assure a high level quality of care for all patients. “We succeeded in developing an AI algorithm
to detect COVID-19 through a CT chest scan
Rology CEO Amr AboDraiaa and his colleagues are
and flag any abnormalities and high priority
addressing this shortage and creating jobs in the
cases. We also launched an AI COVID-19
process. Founded in 2017, the company’s cloud-
detection model in X-ray scans. The Japan
based platform provides intelligent matchmaking
International Cooperation Agency recognized
between patients and remote radiologists. The
our AI innovation in the fight against the
company’s main objective is to save lives by
COVID-19 pandemic, leading us to win the
providing a proper diagnosis to patients no matter
Ninja Award.”

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 67


an established business if they expected to use That the patterns for TEA and EBO are similar
more digital technologies to sell their products may be expected, given that they are both subject
or services in the next six months. This question to the same pressures within an economy.27 What
was continued in 2022, with the results shown in was not expected is that the levels for both are
Figure 4.5. generally higher in Level C economies than in
In 26 of the 49 economies, over half of those Level A, although the Gulf does provide some
starting or running a new business (Total early- exceptions.
stage Entrepreneurial Activity [TEA]) expected If expectations of using more digital
to use more digital technologies to sell their technologies to sell in the next six months are an
products in eight Level C economies, eight Level indicator of how prepared businesses are to face
B and 10 Level A economies. In other words, the future, then many entrepreneurs, both new
there was little evidence of any association with and established, look significantly ill-prepared to
income. The highest levels were in Brazil, the face that future, especially, but not exclusively,
United Arab Emirates, Panama, Mexico, Puerto in Europe. France, for example, has less than one
Rico and Chile: all in Latin America & Caribbean in four new entrepreneurs, and less than one in
except the United Arab Emirates. The lowest levels three Established Business Owners, expecting
were in France, India, Poland and Lithuania: all to use more digital technologies to sell their
in Europe except India. products in the next six months. Lithuania and
Established Business Ownership (EBO) Poland are not much further ahead, although
displays a similar, if slightly diluted pattern, these cases may reflect already high levels of
with the highest levels of those expecting to digitalization. In general, however, if European
use more digital technology to sell being in the economies are not going to be using more digital
United Arab Emirates, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, technologies to sell, while new and established
Brazil and Venezuela, an interesting mix of Latin businesses in Latin America and the Gulf are —
American and Gulf economies, while the lowest and given the Internet’s global reach — then it
levels were in Poland, Togo, Hungary, Austria and would not be surprising to see some shifts in who
Switzerland: all except Togo being in Europe. sells what to whom.

4.5  SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSIBILITIES


Many of those running new or established Among both new and established
businesses have strong social and environmental entrepreneurs there was widespread agreement
concerns, particularly since the pandemic. Social that social concerns were always considered
concerns may include access to education, health, when making decisions about the future of
safety, inclusiveness, housing, transportation, and the business,28 with four in five entrepreneurs
quality of life at home or work. Environmental agreeing — both new and established — in seven
implications can include the preservation of green Level C economies, six Level B, and four Level
areas, reductions in the emission of pollutants A economies. Hence there is some evidence
and toxic gases, selective garbage collection, that agreement declines with income level.
and conscious consumption of water, electricity This is confirmed by looking at economies with
and fuel. Such social and environmental the lowest levels of agreement. Less than three
considerations may be weighed against and even out of four new entrepreneurs agreed in 25
prioritized above profitability or growth. economies: three from Level C, six from Level B
To assess whether those concerns spilled over and 16 from Level A economies. The lowest levels
into business strategy, the GEM APS asks those of established entrepreneur agreement were
running a new or established business whether in Iran (43%) and Israel (47%), out of just nine
they agree that they always consider social economies where three in five or less established
implications when making decisions about the
future of their business. A similar question asked
27 The correlation coefficient between the TEA
whether environmental implications are always proportion and the corresponding EBO proportion is
considered. Results from these questions are 0.808.
shown in Figures 4.6 and 4.7. 28 The correlation coefficient between the percentage of
TEA and percentage of EBO agreeing is 0.830.

68 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) Established Business Ownership (EBO)

100

90

80

70

60

50
%

40

30

20

10

0
Morocco
Colombia
Iran
Togo
China
Egypt
South Africa
India
Venezuela
Tunisia
Indonesia
Brazil
Guatemala
Oman
Hungary
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Greece
Serbia
Croatia
Uruguay
Mexico
Poland
Chile
Romania
Puerto Rico
Panama
Taiwan
Norway
Israel
Sweden
Germany
Japan
Republic of Korea
Netherlands
Spain
Austria
Canada
Switzerland
Lithuania
United States
Cyprus
France
United Kingdom
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Slovenia
Luxembourg
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 4.6 ​“When making decisions about the future of my business, I always consider social implications” (agree, % Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Activity and % Established Business Ownership)
Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022

Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) Established Business Ownership (EBO)

100

90

80

70

60

50
%

40

30

20

10

0
Morocco
Iran
Togo
India
South Africa
Colombia
Egypt
Indonesia
Venezuela
China
Tunisia
Brazil
Guatemala
Oman
Slovak Republic
Latvia
Greece
Serbia
Hungary
Croatia
Poland
Romania
Uruguay
Taiwan
Mexico
Puerto Rico
Chile
Panama
Israel
Germany
Japan
Sweden
Norway
Republic of Korea
Netherlands
Austria
United States
Spain
Cyprus
United Kingdom
France
Switzerland
Canada
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Saudi Arabia
Qatar
United Arab Emirates
Slovenia

Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 4.7 ​“When making decisions about the future of my business, I always consider environmental implications” (agree, % Total
early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity and % Established Business Ownership)
Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 69


entrepreneurs agreed: two Level C, one Level B in two established entrepreneurs agreeing: Israel
and six Level A. and Iran.
Environmental concerns present a very similar That so many of those starting new or running
picture.29 In 19 economies — six Level C, eight established businesses consider social and
Level B and four Level A — four out of five of both environmental concerns when making decisions
new and established entrepreneurs agreeing that is very positive, although those concerns may
these concerns are always considered in decisions decline as incomes rise. That less well-off
about the business. Five economies had less than economies take these concerns seriously is
three in five new entrepreneurs agreeing: three perhaps not surprising, given that many of these
from Middle East & North Africa plus Germany economies have borne the brunt of the social and
and Japan. Only two economies had less than one environmental impacts of change.

4.6  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND THE UNITED NATIONS


SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGs)
Under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable The 17 goals included in the SDGs were
Development approved by the United Nations, published in 2015 and have slowly been gaining
FIGURE 4.8 ​ entrepreneurship was identified as an important traction since. A question in the GEM APS asked
Are you aware mechanism to promote the achievement of the UN those starting new and running established
of the 17 United SDGs for more equitable, greener, more balanced
Nations Sustainable
Development Goals?
and higher-quality development.30
30 See, for example, Lui, Y., Samsami, M., Meshreki,
(% Total early-stage
H., Pereira, F., & Schøtt, T.(2021). Sustainable
Entrepreneurial
29 In this case, the correlation coefficient between the Development Goals in strategy and practice:
Activity and
percentage of TEA and percentage of EBO agreeing is Businesses in Colombia and Egypt. Sustainability,
% Established
0.816. 13(22), 12453. doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212453
Business Ownership)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) Established Business Ownership (EBO)

70

60

50

40
%

30

20

10

0
Morocco

Tunisia

Indonesia

Egypt

India

Colombia

South Africa

Togo

China

Mexico

Uruguay

Serbia

Chile

Greece

Hungary

Latvia

Croatia

Romania

Slovak Republic

Taiwan

Poland

Cyprus

Qatar

Israel

Lithuania

France

Slovenia

Austria

Republic of Korea

United Arab Emirates

Spain

Canada

Switzerland

Norway

Level C Level B Level A

70 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Swarna Shiv
Founder, Unsmudgeable (United States)

The role of education in launching a


company
Over the years, we have consistently seen that access
to quality education varies considerably across the
globe.

A great example of someone who used an


educational experience to start a new business
is Swarna Shiv. She founded Unsmudgeable, a
green permanent anti-smudge eyewear lens
coating for a lifetime of clear vision. The idea for the
company came to fruition in October 2021 during
the first entrepreneurship class Swarna took as an
undergraduate at Babson College.

“We were tasked with generating 10


startup ideas and pitching our best one.
Unsmudgeable ended up being my favourite
because it solves a personal issue.”

After a semester of customer discovery through


constructing preliminary market and feasibility
assessments in the class, Swarna decided to pursue
the idea as a startup. From there, she received
“An education can be essential to
access to the best entrepreneurship programs,
conglomerate the resources and community
pitch competitions and (most importantly)
necessary for an entrepreneur to execute their
people that Babson could offer. In its early
venture. Essentially, without my educational
phases, Unsmudgeable is becoming a materials
experiences at Babson, my startup would not
development company that is building its MVP
exist.”
coating, expanding its team, and identifying further
vertical market integrations.

businesses if they were aware of the SDGs. This and less than two in five everywhere else,
question was optional for national teams to although with some positive association with
administer, with 34 of the 49 APS participating income level. Less than one in 10 new business
economies choosing to ask this in 2022. Of starters were aware of the SDGs in five out of nine
course, this is not a random sample: those Level C economies, one of 12 Level B economies
teams choosing to ask this question have done and none of 13 Level A economies.
so because of their perception of its relevance Established Business Owners evidence a
to entrepreneurs in their economy. Despite this, broadly similar pattern, with more than a third of
Figure 4.8 shows that awareness of the SDGs those running an established business aware of
among those starting a new business or running the SDGs in just four economies (Poland, Norway,
an established business was low. The highest Romania, and China), and less than one in five
level of awareness among those starting a new aware in eight Level C economies, six Level B and
business was 61% in Norway and 43% in Poland, four Level A economies.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 71


This lack of awareness is despite the high entrepreneurs appear to be considering social and
proportions of entrepreneurs, both new environmental issues than those that are aware
and established, reporting in the previous that, in doing so, they may be helping to meet
section that they always consider social and those SDGs. The success of the United Nations
environmental concerns in their decisions about 2030 Sustainable Development Goals is crucial to
the future of the business. Substantially more the future global economy and society.

4.7  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


Individuals tend to start businesses for different most popular choices, although support for the
reasons across different economies and income latter declined as income level increased. The
groups. Significantly, these motivations motivation “to make difference in the world”
increasingly include social and environmental was almost as popular, although the proportion
objectives as well as the traditional profit motive. of new entrepreneurs agreeing was generally
This bodes well for potential shifts towards more higher in low-income economies. The motivation
purpose-driven companies that add value to “to continue a family tradition” was important
society and address some of the world’s biggest in a few specific economies, although its support
challenges according to the United Nations typically also fell as income level rose.
Sustainable Development Goals. If the proportion of entrepreneurs, both new
Whatever the objectives, and despite the and established, expecting to use more digital
pandemic and rising prices, most of those starting technologies to sell their products or services is
a new business in 2022 did not agree that business a guide to how ready their businesses are to face
growth expectations were lower than a year an increasingly digital future, very high levels in
earlier. This was confirmed by a brief comparison some Latin American or Gulf economies suggest
of those new entrepreneurs in 2022 agreeing these are much better prepared than in many
that growth expectations were lower than a European economies.
year earlier, with those answering the same APS Most economies had encouragingly high levels
question in 2021. of new or established entrepreneurs agreeing that
When those starting or running a new business they always considered social and environmental
were asked whether they agree with four defined issues when making decisions about the future
motivations for starting their business, “to of their business. Rather fewer were aware that
build great wealth or very high income” and “to doing so may have kept them in line with the
earn a living because jobs are scarce” were the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

72 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


5
The Impacts of
Entrepreneurial Activity
Stephen Hill and Maribel Guerrero

5.1  WHAT DETERMINES ENTREPRENEURIAL IMPACTS?


The question of why entrepreneurship is expecting to grow is usually an important precursor
important, both to society and to the economy, to actually doing so. The Adult Population Survey
was briefly addressed in Chapter 1. There is a (APS) asks new entrepreneurs how many people
consensus that new businesses have an impact will be working for the business in five years’
by creating jobs, translating ideas into products time. Many people starting a new business expect
and services, introducing new technologies, to employ no one but themselves by then, an
stimulating market competitiveness, and expectation that is likely to be self-fulfilling. Others
generating income and value-added in both expect to employ six or more people in five years’
domestic and international markets. time, which is no guarantee that they will, but
The economic impacts of a new business will promises rather more economic impact in the
be determined by a host of variables, including future. Similarly, many new businesses, especially
turnover, capital intensity, employment, local in consumer services, replicate the activities and
sourcing, export orientation, etc. The new outputs of existing businesses.
business is typically small, with low turnover, few Second, new businesses that disrupt and
employees and local markets, and may be initially transform economies strategically are typically
unprofitable. All of this may be true, but assessing those that produce new goods and services,
the impact of a new business in this way is to miss often introducing innovative technologies and
the point. The issue is not the current impact of processes, as well as competing by selling to
the new enterprise but rather its potential impact: national and international, rather than just
what can the business grow and develop into, and domestic, markets. The APS asks those starting
what will its impacts be then? or running a new business if they are selling any
There is, unfortunately — yet obviously — no products or services that are new, using novel
objective way of establishing what the business technologies or processes, and about the scope of
will become, never mind what its impacts their customers: whether they are local, national
will be. However, a number of individual and or international. Each will be considered in turn
organizational determinants of entrepreneurship because each says something about the potential
impacts can provide an important guide.31 First, economic impact of the new business.

5.2  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND THE UNITED NATIONS


SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGs)
The previous chapter demonstrated that many income and wealth. A substantial proportion of
contemporary new businesses are motivated new and established entrepreneurs explicitly
to make a difference in the world, as well as by take social and environmental considerations

31 In this regard, Neumann highlights the individual impact. Neumann, T. (2021). The impact of
determinants (e.g. motivations, ambitions, entrepreneurship on economic, social and
expectations) and organizational determinants environmental welfare and its determinants: A
(e.g. innovativeness, degree of internationalization, systematic review. Management Review Quarterly, 71(3),
survival strategies) that shape entrepreneurship 553–84. doi: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11301-020-00193-7

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 73


into account in their decision-making, and some those agreeing in the 2022 APS. A positive result
are aware of the United Nations Sustainable shows an increase in the proportion of new
Development Goals (SDGs). New businesses entrepreneurs taking environmental implications
can assist in the achievement of the SDGs both into account. Of the 38 economies answering this
directly and indirectly. For instance, some social question in both years, in 23 that proportion has
enterprises are created to provide employment increased, the largest increases being in South
opportunities to under-represented minorities, Africa, Luxembourg and Norway, but with large
feed the poor, or to directly tackle issues such as decreases also evident in Morocco and Oman.
oceanic pollution or climate change. Particularly Note that the chart shows percentage point
in Level C and B economies,32 many new changes in TEA. Many of these changes are small
entrepreneurs are motivated by a sustainable and unlikely to be significant.
business model to address an “intention–action Assessing the impacts of new enterprises
gap” in the care of their local communities, but on social and environmental well-being is
also in order to generate value for new segments an important area for future research,33 and
of eco-friendly or sustainable customers. is actively being developed by the Global
Some insight into recently burgeoning Entrepreneurship Monitor project. As noted
environmental awareness can be gained by earlier, some first steps have been taken in the
examining the percentage of those starting evolution of the GEM APS, with questions on
FIGURE 5.1 ​ or running new businesses who always take motivation introduced in the 2019 Global Report,
The percentage of environmental implications into account when questions on the role of social and environmental
Total early-stage
making decisions about the future of that
Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA) business, over the two years that the GEM APS has
agreeing that been asking that question. Figure 5.1 subtracts the 33 See further, Vedula, S., Doblinger, C., Pacheco,
they always take percentage of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial D., York, J.G., Bacq, S., Russo, M.V., & Dean, T.J.
environmental (2022). Entrepreneurship for the public good: A
Activity (TEA) agreeing in the 2021 APS from
implication review, critique, and path forward for social and
into account in environmental entrepreneurship research. Academy
2022, minus that of Management Annals, 16(1), 391–425. doi: https://doi.
percentage in 2021 32 See Figures 4.6 and 4.7 in Chapter 4. org/10.5465/annals.2019.0143
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey
2021, 2022

15

10

−5
% TEA

−10

−15

−20

−25

−30
Morocco
Colombia
Egypt
India
Guatemala
Brazil
Iran
South Africa
Oman
Latvia
Greece
Hungary
Poland
Croatia
Chile
Romania
Uruguay
Slovak Republic
Panama
Japan
Germany
United States
Qatar
Netherlands
Israel
Sweden
United Kingdom
Slovenia
Spain
United Arab Emirates
Switzerland
Canada
Cyprus
Saudi Arabia
Republic of Korea
France
Luxembourg
Norway

Level C Level B Level A

74 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Fariel Salahuddin
Founder of Goats for Water (Pakistan) of goats.’ The village doesn’t have cash, but
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2019 maybe they can pay in livestock.”

This is when she offered to accept goats from this


Enabling smallholder farmers to use their
community as payment for a pump. The community
produce and livestock as currency
exchanged 40 goats for a 2.5 hp solar water pump,
Sindh province, a small remote rural farming and Goats for Water was born. The company works
community in Pakistan, was having issues accessing with smallholder farmers, enabling them to buy key
clean water to meet hygiene and health needs. assets such as solar pumps, solar home lights, micro-
Water was being bussed from the nearest city at grids and smartphones that increase the quality
great expense, making it extremely expensive and of their lives and enhances their productivity and
not available to all. A solar water pump would solve livelihoods. Goats for Water has now worked with
their problem but there wasn’t enough money over 60 communities in Pakistan and is successfully
for it. They could have been gifted a pump by the testing its model in Somalia and Nepal, having thus
government or an NGO — but, despite years of far brought water and electricity to over 98,000
waiting, their numbers weren’t large enough to people.
meet with NGOs’ or government KPIs.
Fariel explained:
Is it possible for communities to reimagine money to
“We want to tokenize the livestock to create
make clean water a reality? Fariel Salahuddin asked
a community currency that farmers can use
this question to herself during a visit to Sindh. She
with enhanced affordability for goods and
recalled:
services that they have struggled to acquire
“A herd of about 200 goats was coming back due to low incomes.”
from grazing. I thought ‘Wow, that’s a lot

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 75


considerations in decision-making appearing in Global Report, explicitly asks those national
the APS for the first time in 2021, while questions experts for their assessment of new business
on entrepreneurial awareness of the SDGs were impacts on the SDGs. Slowly, through GEM, a
added in 2022. In addition, the GEM National picture of the wider impacts of entrepreneurial
Expert Survey (NES), considered later in this activity is beginning to emerge.

5.3  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND EMPLOYMENT EXPECTATIONS


It was noted earlier that growth expectations years’ time ranged from one in 50 or less in four
count. New entrepreneurs expecting to create economies (Poland, Morocco, Greece and Cyprus)
many new jobs are likely to have a much greater to around one in 10 in four other economies (Togo,
impact than those expecting to employ no one Uruguay, Canada and United States). In two Level
but themselves. Figure 5.2 shows job growth C and two Level B economies, over half of those
expectations among those starting or running starting a new business expected to employ no
a new business, divided into those expecting to more people, which was also the case in eight
employ no additional people, those expecting to Level A economies.
create, first, up to five new jobs and, second, six At the other end of the scale, 10 economies
jobs or more. had more than one in 20 of their adults both
FIGURE 5.2 ​
Job growth Figure 5.2 shows both the level of job starting or running a new business and expecting
expectations expectations (as a percentage of adults) and, to employ an additional six or more people in
among early-stage indirectly, the share of those starting a new five years’ time. Four of these were in Level C
entrepreneurs
business within each job expectation category (Guatemala, Colombia, Brazil and Iran), four were
expecting to employ
0, 1–5 or 6 or more (% TEA). The proportion of adults in each in Level B (Panama, Chile, Uruguay and Puerto
people in five years’ economy both starting a new business and Rico) and two in Level A (United Arab Emirates
time (% adults) expecting to employ no more people in five and Qatar). The United Arab Emirates had by far
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

0 jobs 1–5 jobs 6+ jobs

30

25

20
% of adults 18–64

15

10

0
Morocco
China
Egypt
Indonesia
South Africa
India
Venezuela
Iran
Tunisia
Brazil
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Romania
Hungary
Serbia
Slovak Republic
Oman
Mexico
Croatia
Latvia
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Chile
Panama
Spain
Japan
Norway
Austria
Luxembourg
Switzerland
Slovenia
Cyprus
Israel
Germany
Sweden
France
Qatar
Republic of Korea
Netherlands
Lithuania
United Kingdom
Canada
United States
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

76 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


2019 2020 2021 2022

80

70

60

50
% TEA

40

30

20

10

0
Colombia

Guatemala

Iran

Egypt

Morocco

India

Brazil

Chile

Panama

Greece

Latvia

Croatia

Poland

Slovak Republic

Oman

United Arab Emirates

Saudi Arabia

Luxembourg

Qatar

Cyprus

Switzerland

United States

Republic of Korea

Slovenia

Germany

Spain

Canada

Netherlands

Israel

Norway

United Kingdom

Sweden
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 5.3 ​
The percentage
the highest level, with almost one in five adults expectations of new entrepreneurs, with of those starting
both starting or running a new business and one conjecture being that, if the pandemic or running a new
expecting to create six or more jobs in five years’ pushed many people into self-employment, business and
expecting to employ
time. the proportion of new entrepreneurs expecting
no additional people
It is instructive to compare, for each economy, to employ no more people might have risen. in five years’ time
the proportion of adults starting and running Figure 5.3 shows the percentage of those starting (% Total early-stage
a new business and expecting to employ no or running a new business who expect to employ Entrepreneurial
Activity)
additional people, to the proportion of new no additional people in five years’ time for each
Source: GEM Adult
entrepreneurs in the same economy expecting year from 2019 to 2022. Population Surveys
to employ six or more. In seven economies — the Of the 32 economies that participated in 2019–2022

Slovak Republic, Spain, Germany, Indonesia, the GEM APS in all years between 2019 and
Switzerland, Oman and Sweden — there were 2022, there are 13 in which the proportion of
at least four adults starting or running a new those starting or running a new business who
business and expecting to employ no more expected to employ no more people in five
people for every new entrepreneur expecting to years’ time fell, most strongly in Poland (from
employ six or more. In these economies, total 40% in 2019 to 15% in 2022), Brazil (54% to
job impacts from those new businesses are likely 31%) and the Republic of Korea (38% to 20%).
to be modest. On the other hand, there were Conversely, there were 19 economies in which
two economies — the United Arab Emirates and that proportion increased, with the strongest
Panama — with four or more times more adults increases in the Slovak Republic (from 40% in
starting a new business and expecting to employ 2019 to 71% in 2022), Germany (41% to 69%)
six or more people, than starting a business and and Oman (48% to 71%). So overall some slight
expecting to employ no more people. Job impacts indications are evident of an increase in the
from new businesses are likely to be higher here. proportions of new entrepreneurs expecting to
There is also the interesting question of employ no more people, especially in Northern
whether the pandemic has impacted the job Europe.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 77


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Ken Gordon
President and CEO, Quantum Silicon Inc. (Canada)

Starting a business to seize on an


opportunity
Individuals start businesses for a number of different
reasons. Some are motivated to make a difference in
the world. Others aspire to build great wealth or earn
a very high income. In some cases, individuals resort
to entrepreneurship because jobs are scarce or to
continue a family tradition.

Ken Gordon, President and CEO of the Canadian-


based company Quantum Silicon, started his
business because “It was a compelling opportunity
that just had to be taken up.”

Quantum Silicon harnesses proprietary single-atom


silicon quantum dots to create high-speed quantum
accelerators that are at least 100 times more energy-
efficient than their transistor-based equivalents. The
company offers a suite of Quantum Accelerators possible so that the development process could lead
that provide fast, energy-efficient, secure solutions to useful products. Said Ken:
for rapidly growing markets such as cybersecurity “It was becoming clear that the
and quantum sensing. semiconductor industry was facing the end
The origins of the company date back to 2012 of the Moore’s Law path that had guided its
when Ken was a partner with a Canadian venture development for half a century. That path was
fund. In the process of exploring new deals, ending because of the energy inefficiency of
he met Robert Wolkow, a physics professor at the transistor.”
the University of Alberta and inventor of the The challenge was bringing to market a new
single-atom silicon quantum dot (SQD). The technology using silicon, which most people would
professor explained to Ken how patterns of have thought had been thoroughly investigated and
these SQDs can be used to replace transistors in fully developed in a mature and complex industry.
computing circuits, making them faster and more Ken was up for the challenge because: “If successful,
energy-efficient. Behind the SQD technology the payoff would be enormous.”
lay a unique atomically precise manufacturing
technology. To date, Quantum Silicon Inc. has automated its
atomically precise manufacturing technology,
At these early stages, the SQD technology had been making it scalable, and has designed its first
patented and some rough ideas existed about how products: a Quantum Random Number Generator
to use it to make energy-efficient fast electronics. and a Quantum Magnetometer. Ken says:
Manufacturing was complex and slow, requiring
constant human supervision at every stage. Ken’s “The products are all-silicon and all-electronic.
experience, however, led him to believe that it Competing products use exotic materials
was important to confront the market as early as like nitrogen vacancy diamond and photonic
sources of randomness.”

78 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


5.4  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND INNOVATION
As noted earlier, the potential contributions introducing products or services that were new
of entrepreneurship include turning ideas to their area, new to their country or new to the
into products or services, expanding choices, world. Of the 49 economies, 11 had fewer than one
introducing new technologies or processes, in 100 adults starting or running a new business
and improving efficiency. Product or process introducing any goods and services at least new to
innovation can be important characteristics their area, while 45 economies had less than one
of high-impact new entrepreneurship, so the in 20 adults doing the same.34 Put another way,
GEM APS asks those starting or running a new there were just four economies where more than
business if they are introducing any products one in 20 new entrepreneurs were introducing
or services that are new to the area, new to the any goods or services that were at least new to
country or new to the world, alongside a similar their area. Two of these economies were in Level
question about the use of any new technologies C (Guatemala and Colombia), while two were in
or processes. Of course, in a small economy,
their “area” and their “country” may be virtually
synonymous. As it turns out, innovation in
new entrepreneurship is much more likely 34 Once again, many of these numbers are very low, so
to involve applying product or process ideas care must be taken not to attach undue significance
to small differences. For example, suppose an APS
developed elsewhere than introducing products FIGURE 5.4 ​
with a sample size of 2,000 reveals a level of TEA
or technologies that are new to the world. This The proportion of
of 10%. This implies 200 adults starting or running
adults starting a
diffusion of ideas is important in improving a new business. If 1% of those was introducing a
new business with
quality and efficiency. product that was new to that country, that is just two
products or services
entrepreneurs. It would be unwise to assert that, if
Figure 5.4 shows the proportion of adults that were new to
three entrepreneurs were doing the same in another
in each participating economy who were their area, new to
economy, new product innovation was 50% higher
their country, or
both starting or running a new business and than in the first economy.
new to the world
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

New to their area New to their country New to the world

16

14

12
% of adults 18–64

10

0
Morocco
Egypt
China
Indonesia
Togo
South Africa
India
Tunisia
Venezuela
Brazil
Iran
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Taiwan
Greece
Serbia
Romania
Hungary
Oman
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Mexico
Croatia
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Panama
Chile
Spain
Norway
Austria
Israel
Sweden
Lithuania
Slovenia
Japan
Cyprus
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Luxembourg
Republic of Korea
France
Qatar
Netherlands
Germany
Saudi Arabia
Canada
United States
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 79


New to their area New to their country New to the world

12

10

8
% of adults 18–64

0
Morocco
China
Egypt
Indonesia
Togo
South Africa
India
Venezuela
Tunisia
Iran
Brazil
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Serbia
Romania
Greece
Taiwan
Oman
Hungary
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Mexico
Croatia
Uruguay
Puerto Rico
Panama
Chile
Norway
Spain
Austria
Israel
Luxembourg
Sweden
Republic of Korea
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Lithuania
Japan
Cyprus
Slovenia
France
Qatar
Netherlands
Germany
Canada
Saudi Arabia
United States
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 5.5 ​
The proportion of
adults starting a Level B (Panama and Chile). There were none in Within each income group, more or less the
new business with Level A. same economies recur at the top and bottom.
any technologies In terms of new entrepreneurs introducing Within income Level C, the three economies
or procedures that
products or services new to their country (also scoring lowest in terms of the percentage of
are either new to
their area, new to Figure 5.4), there were 31 economies in which this adults starting or running a new business
their country or rate was less than 1%, and just seven economies and introducing any new products or services
new to the world where this rate exceeded 2%. None of the latter (Figure 5.4) were Morocco, Egypt and China; for
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022
were in Level C, four were in Level B (Puerto new technologies (Figure 5.5), it was the same
Rico, Uruguay, Chile and Panama) and three in three. In Level C, the highest for new products
Level A (United Arab Emirates, United States and were Guatemala, Columbia and Iran; for new
Canada). Finally, starting a new business and technologies, it was Guatemala, Columbia and
introducing any products or services that are new Brazil. The other income groups were a little
to the world is very rare indeed, reported by less more diverse, but not much. Hence there is a
than 1% of adults in 45 of the 49 economies. The high degree of correlation between the two:
exceptions were Puerto Rico, the United States, the economies in which a new business is most
the United Arab Emirates and Chile, with the likely to be introducing new products are more
latter highest at just 2.6% of adults. or less the same in which a new business is
Those new entrepreneurs using new most likely to be using new technologies or
technologies or procedures present a procedures. It would not be difficult to combine
now familiar picture (Figure 5.5). Note the the two figures to produce a league table of new
similarities between Figure 5.4 and Figure 5.5. business innovation within each income group.

80 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


5.5  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND COMPETITIVENESS35
In the 2019 APS, GEM introduced new questions Luxembourg, Israel or Cyprus, local and national
about the scope of a business’s customers, can imply more or less the same space.
i.e. whether they will have customers within Figure 5.6 shows that the highest levels of
their local area, only within their own country, local-only customers for those starting or running
and whether they will have customers outside of a new business were in Level C, with the clear
their country. This customer scope is important, exception of Chile in Level B, where over 20% of
because having customers beyond the local area/ adults were starting or running a new business
country brings revenue into that area or country, with only local customers, followed by Guatemala
with what can be significant spillover effects on at 15% and Uruguay, Brazil, Togo and Saudi
other businesses and incomes. Arabia, each around 10% of adults. Saudi Arabia
Figure 5.6 shows, for each economy, the level is the only high-income economy with this level of
of TEA, and those within this that will have local-only customers, with the next high-income
customers only within their local area, only within economies being the United States and Canada,
their country and those that will have customers both with around 6%. Twelve economies had
abroad. Again, note that, in small economies like less than one in 50 adults starting or running a FIGURE 5.6 ​
The level of
business with only local customers, four from
Total early-stage
Level B and eight from Level A. The lowest of all Entrepreneurial
35 Guerrero et al. (2016) found a bi-directional
was Luxembourg, a small country where having Activity (TEA) and
relationship between entrepreneurship and
only local customers could be very limiting. those within this
regional competitiveness, as well as some insights
that will have only
on the endogenous process of wealth creation in In 2022, relatively few adults were starting
customers in their
economies. For further details, Guerrero, M., Urbano, or running a business expecting international local area, only
D., & Fayolle, A. (2016). Entrepreneurial activity and
customers. None of the Level C economies had within their country
regional competitiveness: evidence from European
at least one in 20 adults starting a business and those that will
entrepreneurial universities. The Journal of Technology
have international
Transfer, 41(1), 105–131. and expecting international customers, a level
customers (% adults)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Local only National International

30

25

20
% of adults 18–64

15

10

0
Morocco
China
Egypt
Indonesia
South Africa
India
Venezuela
Iran
Tunisia
Brazil
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Romania
Slovak Republic
Hungary
Serbia
Oman
Mexico
Croatia
Latvia
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Chile
Panama
Spain
Japan
Norway
Austria
Luxembourg
Switzerland
Slovenia
Cyprus
Sweden
Germany
Israel
France
Qatar
Republic of Korea
Netherlands
Lithuania
United Kingdom
Canada
United States
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 81


ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT

Rasha Rady
Co-founder and CEO of Chefaa (Egypt)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2020

Delivering for patients while working in


different environments
Chronically ill patients in Egypt fill two million
prescriptions each month. Yet, despite the high
prescription volume, Egyptian pharmacy systems
are not tech-enabled. The MENA region has the
highest incidence of non-communicable diseases
globally and medication shortages are common.
What is the point of going to the doctor if you don’t
get the right medicine?

This sentiment was captured in a dialogue between


Dr Rasha Rady and her friend Doaa Aref. Following
surgery, Doaa asked: “Do you realize I can order
anything online, except the medication I need to
stay alive?”

Dr Rady knew from her work with chronically ill


patients that many people were experiencing this
same frustration. In response, Dr Rady and Doaa
created Chefaa, a digital platform that helps chronic
patients order, schedule and refill prescriptions
regardless of location or income. Patients enter
prescriptions on an AI-powered, GPS-enabled
application which locates the nearest pharmacy. The
prescription is then ordered, delivered and refilled
“Working from home had a positive impact on
using a companion professional app.
the Chefaa team.”
Launched in 2017, Chefaa was well positioned to
After COVID-19 pandemic restrictions were lifted,
address the disruptions and health care needs
some employees returned to the office while others
resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. Dr Rady
worked from home.
explained:
“As per our experience, a 100% working-
“With chronic patients being at highest risk
from-home policy didn’t have the same result.
amid the global COVID-19 crisis, staying at
We found that a healthy work environment
home was their only option and they had
and interdepartmental interactions of
to explore digital solutions. Chefaa aligned
employees creates a strong bond resulting in
perfectly to this need.”
more productive outcomes.”
In addition to patients, the Chefaa team was also
able to adapt, pivoting operations to a remote work
set-up. Said Dr Rady:

82 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


attained by only three Level B economies (Croatia, Emirates adults were new entrepreneurs that
Latvia and Puerto Rico, all with just over 6%). anticipate international customers, a level more
Meanwhile, more than one in eight United Arab than twice that of the United States (5%).

5.6  ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND INTERNATIONAL REVENUE


The previous section has already demonstrated a new business are asked what proportion of
the relative paucity of international customers for their annual sales revenue comes from outside
those starting or running a new business. Having their country. The results for 2022 are shown in
international customers is a matter of policy Figure 5.7. Note that this chart shows results as a
and strategic practice: does the public policy percentage of TEA rather than the percentage of
framework in the economy encourage exports, adults, and is therefore not directly comparable to
is foreign currency freely available to exchange, the previous charts in this chapter.
and are there tariffs and duties that mean extra Of the 13 Level C economies, only one (South
costs that could represent an entry barrier? Africa) had 10% or more of its new entrepreneurs
Economies are more likely to trade with each anticipating a quarter of its revenue coming
other if they share the same language, or have from outside the country, compared to six
aspects of culture in common, while exports by economies in Level B and 18 in Level A. The five
new businesses may be more prevalent in smaller lowest proportions of new entrepreneurs with
economies with large neighbours. this anticipation were all from Level C (China,
FIGURE 5.7 ​
GEM defines a new business as export- Brazil, India and Egypt) plus Level B Chile, while The percentage of
intensive if 25% of revenue or more is expected three of the five highest proportions were from Total early-stage
to come from overseas. This may be direct, as Level A (United Arab Emirates, Luxembourg Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA)
in exported goods or services, or indirectly, and Slovenia), plus Level B Latvia and Croatia.
anticipating 25%
such as purchases by tourists or visitors. Those All except the United Arab Emirates were from or more of revenue
identified in the GEM APS as starting or running Europe. from outside
their country
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

40

35

30

25
% TEA

20

15

10

0
China
Brazil
India
Egypt
Iran
Venezuela
Indonesia
Morocco
Colombia
Guatemala
Tunisia
Togo
South Africa
Chile
Panama
Poland
Mexico
Uruguay
Oman
Serbia
Taiwan
Puerto Rico
Hungary
Romania
Slovak Republic
Greece
Croatia
Latvia
Republic of Korea
Saudi Arabia
Japan
Norway
Qatar
Spain
United Kingdom
France
Switzerland
United States
Lithuania
Sweden
Israel
Canada
Cyprus
Germany
Netherlands
Austria
Slovenia
Luxembourg
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 83


However, high proportions of new pandemic, seeking new customers outside of
entrepreneurs expecting a quarter or more of their country, or whether they turned inwards,
revenue from outside their country may not imply focusing on domestic customers. For the
high proportions among the adult population. percentage of new entrepreneurs anticipating at
Relatively low levels of new entrepreneurship in least a quarter of revenue coming from outside
these five economies scoring high in Figure 5.7 their country, a brief analysis of 2019–2022
means that only two had 3% or more of its adults data showed very little change, with just one
starting or running a new business that expected economy increasing its proportion each year
a quarter or more revenue from outside their (the Netherlands, up from 12% of TEA in 2019 to
country. By far the highest percentage of adults 22% in 2022). Most economies saw little change,
starting or running a business and having such although at least four appeared to have turned
expectations was in the United Arab Emirates at inwards, with falls in Saudi Arabia (from 26%
9%, almost three times the next highest (Latvia). in 2019 to 5% in 2022), Egypt (10% to 2%), the
Another interesting question is whether new United Kingdom (20% to 13%) and Switzerland
entrepreneurs turned outwards as a result of the (27% to 15%)

5.7  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


Most governments see the encouragement of of those starting or running a new business who
new entrepreneurship as a major policy objective expected to employ no more people in five years’
because of the contribution new businesses time — in the 32 economies that participated in
can make, not just to jobs, incomes and value- the APS in all years 2019–2022 — provided some
added, but increasingly to addressing social and insights into risky or conservative strategies
environmental concerns. The GEM APS is evolving adopted due to the influence of external shocks
to address the impacts of new businesses on (pandemic or high inflation rates) on the fixed
these issues, including their economic and social costs of creating a new job.
contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Alongside jobs, the second impact indicator
Development Goals (SDGs). Recent evidence of new businesses is in the application of new
suggests that new entrepreneurs are increasingly ideas: that is, innovation in products and/or
taking environmental implications into account in processes. The APS showed that, in 2022, both
their decision-making. of these were very much minority activities
New businesses are particularly important, not among those starting new businesses, albeit
just for what they offer now but especially for their with a high degree of correlation between
high-growth potential. While there is no objective product and process innovation. Very few new
method of predicting such potential impact, here businesses were introducing any products,
GEM provides a number of useful indicators. The services, processes or procedures that were new
first impact indicator is anticipated jobs. In 12 of to the world. Considering high R&D costs and
the 49 GEM-participating economies in 2022, over current inflation rates, the GEM project reveals
half of those starting or running a new business some differentiation in these impact measures.
expected to employ no more people in five years’ Relatively few individuals who have created a
time. Conversely, 10 economies had more than 5% new business across the participant countries in
of their adults starting a business and expecting 2022 show an orientation to innovate as an entry
to add six or more jobs in five years’ time. Seven strategy.
were in Latin America & Caribbean, and three The third impact indicator is having
were in the Middle East. None were in Europe or international customers, bringing resources into
North America. Given current socio-economic the economy and generating further business.
conditions, GEM data reveal an optimistic labour GEM defines a high-export orientation business
market signal in this impact measure. In general, as one that anticipates 25% or more of its revenue
most of the adults who have created a new coming from outside the country. In the 2022 GEM
business across the participant countries in 2022 APS, 15 economies had more than one in six of
show an aspiration to grow in the next five years new entrepreneurs anticipating a quarter or more
by creating more jobs. An evolutionary analysis of their revenue from outside of their country.

84 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Nine of these were Level A economies (seven It is difficult to assess whether this is a product
from Europe plus Canada and the United Arab of the particular circumstances of 2022, in a
Emirates), three Level B (all from Europe) and just post-pandemic, high-inflation global economy
one Level C (South Africa). Directly or indirectly, with continuing unresolved conflicts. It also is
this GEM impact indicator provides some insights clear that many new businesses have much to
into how those who have created new businesses gain from developing new customers beyond
in 2022 are stimulating competitiveness in both their own borders. Assuming that governments
domestic and international markets based on are interested in promoting high-growth,
their market segmentation strategy in current ambitious entrepreneurs and then capturing
socio-economic conditions. their potential impacts,36 GEM trends can be
In summary, among new businesses, high useful for introducing institutional reforms,
job expectations and high export orientation policy frameworks and specific programs related
showed rather more potential impacts than to labour market conditions, R&D investment and
any focus on product or process innovation. internationalization strategies.

36 According to Darnihamedani and Block (p. 1), on


average, flexibility-enhancing reforms lead to higher
growth ambitions yet they are particularly favoured by
established and imitative entrepreneurs; by contrast,
stability-enhancing reforms lead to higher growth
ambitions of new and innovative entrepreneurs.
Darnihamedani, P., & Block, J.H. (2022). Institutional
reforms and entrepreneurial growth ambitions.
Academy of Management Proceedings, 2022(1),
p. 13726). doi: https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2022.153

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 85


6
All Kinds of Entrepreneurs
Stephen Hill and Przemysław Zbierowski

6.1  INTRODUCTION
One question considered in Chapter 2 was lockdowns.38 This is an empirical question, and
whether anyone can become an entrepreneur. The this chapter will take some tentative first steps
answer was: yes — becoming an entrepreneur is towards addressing it.
not dependent on having a particular background, Differences in the level of entrepreneurial
or being a specific age, being a particular gender, participation between two groups can be
or having a given level of education. Yet, although measured and assessed in two ways. The first is
starting a business is, in principle, open to all, the absolute gap, or the proportion of adults in
and all can succeed or fail in this endeavour, in one group starting or running a new business,
practice starting a business is more prevalent in minus the equivalent proportion in another group.
particular social groups, including those defined The second is the relative gap, or the proportion of
by gender, age and education. The downside adults starting or running a new business in one
of this prevalence is that it implies that some group, divided by the proportion doing the same
other groups are missing out by being under- in the other group. Both measures are important,
represented in terms of entrepreneurship. This and both will be considered in this chapter. It is
means that not only do some individuals lose also important to keep in mind that overall levels
out by not starting businesses, but that society of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)
as a whole misses out by not having the jobs and can vary considerably across economies, and that
incomes those businesses could have provided. between-economy differences may be many times
It is important that all members of society see larger than any between-group differences within
people like themselves starting and succeeding an economy. An individual selected at random in
with new businesses, but the likelihood of this an economy with a high level of TEA is more likely
happening may vary considerably by group. to be starting a business than an individual in a
This chapter will examine these prevalences, low-TEA economy, regardless of gender, age or
including gender differences, in the level of education.
entrepreneurship by economy. This has been a
recurring theme in recent Global Reports: this
one will include a brief assessment of whether 38 Stephan, U., Zbierowski, P., Pérez-Luño, A., Wach,
the pandemic has impacted the entrepreneurial D., Wiklund, J., Alba Cabañas, M., Barki, E., Benzari,
gender gap. A recent GEM Women’s A., Bernhard-Oettel, C., Boekhorst, J., Dash, A.,
Efendic, A., Eib, C., Hanard, P.-J., Iakovleva, T.,
Entrepreneurship Report37 suggested that, by
Kawakatsu, S., Khalid, S., Leatherbee, M., Li, J.,
taking the major role in caring for relatives Parker, S.K., Qu, J., Rosati, F., Sahasranamam, S.,
and in homeschooling, women have been Salusse, M.A.Y., Sekiguchi, T., Thomas, N., Torres,
disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, O., Tran, M.H., Ward, M.K., Williamson, A.J., &
Zahid, M.M. (2022). Act or wait-and-see? Adversity,
and therefore the entrepreneurial gender gap
agility, and entrepreneur wellbeing across countries
is likely to have widened. Additionally, women during the COVID-19 pandemic. Entrepreneurship
entrepreneurs are over-represented in running Theory and Practice. advanced online publication:
businesses that require direct contact with the https://doi.org/10.1177/10422587221104820;
Stephan, U., Zbierowski, P., and Hanard, P.J. (2020).
customer, hence were more adversely impacted by
Entrepreneurship and Covid-19: Challenges and
opportunities. An assessment of the short and
long-term consequences for UK small business.
37 GEM (Global Entrepreneurship Monitor) (2021). GEM London: King’s College London. https://www.kcl.
2021/22 Women’s Entrepreneurship Report: From ac.uk/business/assets/PDF/research-papers/country-
Crisis to Opportunity. London: GEM. https://www. report-uk-entrepreneurship-and-covid-19-challenges-
gemconsortium.org/report/gem-202122-womens- and-opportunities-an-assessment-of-the-short-and-
entrepreneurship-report-from-crisis-to-opportunity long-term-consequences-for-uk-small-businesses.pdf

86 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


6.2  THE ENTREPRENEURIAL GENDER GAP
Figure 6.1 shows the level of male and female TEA gender gap (male minus female) exceeded seven
across the 49 GEM Adult Population Survey (APS) percentage points in five economies: four from
participating economies in 2022.39 Male TEA Europe (Serbia, Lithuania, Croatia and Latvia),
continues to be more prevalent than female TEA plus the United Arab Emirates.
across most economies, although there were four Established Business Ownership (EBO)
economies in which the female TEA rate exceeded is typically more male-dominated than new
that of men: Togo, Indonesia, Poland and Qatar. entrepreneurship, which could suggest that
In Figure 6.1 there are seven economies in female entrepreneurship is a more recent
which one in five women, or more, were starting or phenomenon than male entrepreneurship, or that
running a new business (three from 13 in income women-owned businesses have lower survival
Level A, three from 15 Level B and one from 21 Level rates than those owned by men,40 although
A economies), with the highest levels in Guatemala the association between male and female EBO
and Colombia. But there are also eight economies is rather less than for TEA.41 Levels of EBO by
in which less than one in 20 women was doing the gender are set out in Figure 6.2.
same (two Level C, three Level B and three Level A).
The lowest levels of female new entrepreneurship
were in Poland, Morocco and Greece. 40 There is evidence that the lower work experience of
There were 11 economies in which male new women entrepreneurs might lead to lower survival
rates, while lower salaries of women entrepreneurs
entrepreneurship exceeded one in five, and just prior to entry may translate into financial constraints.
one economy (Poland) in which this was less See Boden Jr, R.J., & Nucci, A.R. (2000). On the survival
than one in 20. The absolute entrepreneurial prospects of men’s and women’s new business FIGURE 6.1 ​
ventures. Journal of Business Venturing, 15(4), 347–62. Levels of Total early-
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0883-9026(98)00004-4 stage Entrepreneurial
39 The correlation coefficient between female TEA and 41 The correlation coefficient between female EBO and Activity (TEA) by
male TEA is O.939, implying that female TEA would be male EBO is 0.765, still positive but much weaker than gender (% women,
a good predictor of male TEA (and vice versa). for TEA. % men)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

TEA female TEA male

35

30

25

20
% TEA

15

10

0
Morocco
Egypt
China
South Africa
Indonesia
India
Iran
Tunisia
Venezuela
Brazil
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Serbia
Romania
Hungary
Croatia
Slovak Republic
Latvia
Oman
Mexico
Puerto Rico
Uruguay
Panama
Chile
Japan
Norway
Cyprus
Luxembourg
Slovenia
Spain
Austria
Switzerland
Israel
Sweden
Germany
France
Republic of Korea
Lithuania
Netherlands
United Kingdom
Qatar
Canada
Saudi Arabia
United States
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 87


EBO female EBO male

25

20

15
% EBO

10

0
Egypt
Morocco
South Africa
Venezuela
China
Iran
Colombia
Tunisia
Indonesia
Brazil
India
Guatemala
Togo
Mexico
Serbia
Croatia
Oman
Puerto Rico
Panama
Slovak Republic
Uruguay
Hungary
Taiwan
Chile
Romania
Latvia
Poland
Greece
Qatar
France
Germany
United Arab Emirates
Sweden
Norway
Luxembourg
Israel
Cyprus
Japan
United Kingdom
Netherlands
Canada
Lithuania
Austria
Slovenia
Spain
United States
Switzerland
Saudi Arabia
Republic of Korea
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 6.2 ​
Levels of Established
Business Ownership There are five economies in which more women every woman doing the same. There were also five
(EBO) by gender than men own established businesses (Venezuela, economies with more women owning established
(% women, % men) Indonesia and Togo, all Level C, plus Israel and businesses than men: Indonesia, Togo, Venezuela,
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022
Saudi Arabia from Level A), but margins are Israel and Saudi Arabia.
small. There were also six economies in which the Figure 6.3 compares the new entrepreneur
proportion of men owning established businesses relative gender gap (female % TEA divided by
exceeded that of women by seven percentage male % TEA), with the EBO relative gender gap
points or more: Iran, Tunisia, Brazil, the Republic (female % EBO divided by male % EBO) for
of Korea, Latvia and Brazil. GEM-participating economies in 2022.
In four economies the new entrepreneur Overall, the relative gender gap for
relative gender gap was 0.5 or less, implying ownership of established businesses tends
that in these economies there were at least two to be smaller than the relative gender gap for
men starting or running a new business for new entrepreneurs (34 out of 49 economies)
every woman doing the same. These economies suggesting, as noted above, either that greater
were Egypt, Japan, Serbia and Cyprus. Greece, equality between genders starting new
Norway and Slovenia are not far behind. In those businesses is a recent phenomenon that has
economies there is clear evidence that women yet to work its way into established businesses,
are missing out on opportunities to start new or that businesses started by women may
businesses, and that both they and their wider have a lower rate of transition into established
economies are poorer as a result. businesses than those started by men.
Conversely, there were 17 of 49 economies, While in most economies the gender gap is
across all income groups, where the EBO relative smaller among owners of established than of
gender gap was less than 0.5, implying two or new businesses, there are some examples where
more men owning an established businesses for it is extremely unfavourable for women. In five
every established business owned by a woman, economies, all in the Middle East and North
including in Morocco and Iran, where there are at Africa (Morocco, Iran, Tunisia, Oman, Qatar),
least four men owning an established business for the relative gender gap among Established

88 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Ratio Ratio

0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4

Egypt Egypt
Morocco
Morocco
Iran
Iran China
China Tunisia
Brazil Brazil
South Africa

(female % EBO/male % EBO)


South Africa

Level C
Level C
Colombia
Colombia Venezuela
Guatemala Guatemala

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022


India
India
Togo

Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2019, 2022


Greece Indonesia
Croatia Serbia
Latvia Greece
Croatia
Taiwan
Latvia
Panama Taiwan
Slovak Republic Hungary
Romania
Puerto Rico
Panama
Chile Slovak Republic

Level B
Level B
Mexico Puerto Rico
TEA

2022
Oman Uruguay
Chile
Poland Mexico

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Japan Oman
Poland
EBO

Cyprus
Japan

2019
Norway
Cyprus
Slovenia Lithuania
Republic of Korea Norway
Slovenia
Netherlands
Republic of Korea
Luxembourg Netherlands
Germany Luxembourg
Sweden Germany
Sweden
Israel
France

Level A
Level A

United Arab Emirates Israel


FIGURE 6.3 ​Relative gender gaps for new businesses (female % TEA/male % TEA) and for established businesses

United Kingdom United Arab Emirates


United Kingdom
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Switzerland Switzerland
Canada Canada
United States Austria
United States
Spain
Spain

FIGURE 6.4 ​The relative entrepreneurial gender gap (female Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)/male TEA), 2022 and 2019

89
Qatar Qatar
Business Owners is twice as big as among those also over-represented in customer-oriented
starting or running a new business. On the services which makes their businesses
other hand, there are 15 economies in which vulnerable in lockdowns. If this was the
the gender gap narrows with the time spent case, then the relative entrepreneurial
running a business, including Venezuela, Israel gender gap will have increased and the ratio
and Saudi Arabia, where a majority of men of female new entrepreneurship to male
among startup entrepreneurs and new business new entrepreneurship (female % TEA/male
owners converts to a majority of women running % TEA) will have fallen. Figure 6.4 shows this
established businesses. In some countries more relative gender gap for the 38 economies that
support is needed to aid women entrepreneurs participated in the GEM APS in both 2022
to navigate through the most difficult phase of (post-pandemic) and 2019 (pre-pandemic).
business activity. In 17 of the 38 economies, the ratio of female
Another important question is whether to male entrepreneurship fell between 2019
the pandemic has had any impact on the and 2022, consistent with the conjecture above,
entrepreneurial gender gap. The introduction but in 21 of the 38 economies that ratio had
to this chapter conjectured that women’s increased, contradicting the conjecture. Overall,
entrepreneurship was more likely to this limited evidence does not support the
have been adversely affected than men’s assertion that women’s new entrepreneurship
entrepreneurship because women were has declined relative to that of men over the
likely to have taken the greater part of the period of the pandemic. The largest increases
burden of working, caring and schooling from were in India and Oman, while the largest falls
home, while women business owners are were in Saudi Arabia and Greece.

6.3  THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AGE GAP


The relationship between the age of the individual the GEM APS asks the age of the respondent.
and the propensity of that individual to be Those identified as starting or running a new
a new entrepreneur is likely to be complex. business can then be grouped by age: in this case
Younger adults tend to have less knowledge into a younger age group (adults aged 18–34) and
and experience, smaller networks, fewer an older age group (aged 35–64), and a TEA rate
resources and fewer skills than older people. calculated for each. Figure 6.5 shows the results,
On the other hand, they may have more energy, for the 49 GEM economies in 2022.
enthusiasm and drive, less to give up in terms For the younger age group, there were seven
of an established career and high salary, and economies with over a quarter of adults starting or
less to lose because they may not yet have to running a new business, including five from Latin
support a family, pay a mortgage, etc. They may America & Caribbean, plus the United States and
be more familiar with current trends, and with Togo. The highest rates were in Guatemala (35%)
the application potential of new technologies. and Uruguay (32%). In the same age group there
Perhaps most importantly, like the novice taking were 17 economies with less than one in 10 adults
up a sport such as golf or skiing, they don’t yet starting or running a new business, with the
know what they can’t do. lowest rates in Poland (3%), Greece, Morocco and
Older people may have more experience, Norway (each 5%).
greater resources including networks and In the older (35–64 years) age group, there
knowledge, and greater awareness of market were just four economies with more than one in
opportunities. However, they also may have four starting or running a new business (three
more to lose, and be more aware of their own from Latin America & Caribbean) plus the United
limitations. Arab Emirates. The highest rates were in Chile,
Ultimately, whether young people are more Colombia and Panama (each 27%). However in
or less likely to be starting a business than older 27 out of 49 economies the rate of 35–49-year-
people is essentially an empirical question. After olds starting or running a business was less than
enquiring whether the individual is actively one in 10. The lowest rates were in Poland (1%),
engaged in starting or running a new business, Morocco (3%) and China (4%). In fact, in Poland,

90 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Adults aged 18–34 Adults aged 35–64

40

35

30

25
% TEA

20

15

10

0
Morocco
Indonesia
Egypt
China
South Africa
India
Tunisia
Venezuela
Iran
Brazil
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Romania
Hungary
Oman
Slovak Republic
Serbia
Mexico
Latvia
Croatia
Puerto Rico
Chile
Panama
Uruguay
Norway
Spain
Japan
Luxembourg
Switzerland
Austria
Israel
Qatar
Republic of Korea
France
Sweden
Cyprus
Slovenia
Germany
United Kingdom
Netherlands
Lithuania
Saudi Arabia
Canada
United Arab Emirates
United States
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 6.5 ​
The level of
most of the overall TEA is therefore generated by both rates, so that between-country differences
42
Total early-stage
the younger generation of entrepreneurs. are likely to strongly outweigh between-group Entrepreneurial
Hence there is strong evidence that adults in differences. Nevertheless, there are clear Activity (TEA) for
the younger age group were more likely to be indications that older people are not starting adults aged 18–34
and for those aged
starting or running a new business than older as many new businesses as they could. This is 35–64 (% of adults
adults. This is confirmed by the TEA rate for an area where policy changes to encourage and in each age group)
younger adults exceeding that of older adults in support older people into new businesses could Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022
35 of the 49 economies. Keep in mind, however, have a substantial impact on the overall rate of
that there was strong positive association between new business formation.

6.4  THE ENTREPRENEURIAL GRADUATION GAP


Those taking part in the GEM APS are asked about opportunity recognition, knowledge and access
their highest level of educational attainment. to networks,44 but, given that graduates typically
This information can be combined with that earn more than non-graduates, they may also
from questions about starting or running a new have less incentive to start a new business. So
business, in order to calculate a TEA rate for both it is not obvious whether, within a particular
graduates43 and non-graduates. economy, graduates or non-graduates are more
Graduates may have an advantage in starting a likely to be starting a new business. Once more,
new business in terms of confidence, training in the question is essentially empirical.

42 Correlation coefficient = 0.848. 44 Sahasranamam, S., & Nandakumar, M.K. (2020).


43 Those reporting in the APS that their highest level Individual capital and social entrepreneurship:
of educational achievement was a post-secondary Role of formal institutions. Journal of Business
qualification, usually a bachelor degree or higher, are Research, 107, 104–17. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.
classified here as graduates. jbusres.2018.09.005

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 91


% TEA graduates % TEA non-graduates

45

40

35

30

25
%

20

15

10

0
Morocco
China
Egypt
Indonesia
South Africa
India
Tunisia
Brazil
Iran
Venezuela
Togo
Colombia
Guatemala
Poland
Greece
Taiwan
Romania
Hungary
Slovak Republic
Oman
Serbia
Mexico
Croatia
Latvia
Puerto Rico
Chile
Uruguay
Panama
Japan
Norway
Switzerland
Spain
Israel
Austria
Sweden
Slovenia
Luxembourg
Cyprus
Qatar
France
Germany
Republic of Korea
Lithuania
Netherlands
United Kingdom
Canada
Saudi Arabia
United States
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 6.6 ​
The level of
Total early-stage Figure 6.6 shows TEA rates for graduates The message from Figure 6.6 is crystal
Entrepreneurial and non-graduates in the 49 GEM economies clear.45 Higher education can be a fast track into
Activity (TEA) for participating in the APS in 2022. The evidence new entrepreneurship, so that increasing the
graduates and for
is unequivocal. In 45 of the 49 economies in proportion of graduates holds substantial promise
non-graduates
(% of adults in 2022, the graduate TEA rate exceeded that of in the search for ways to grow the number of
each age group) non-graduates, the exceptions being Tunisia, new businesses. A more detailed analysis could
Source: GEM Adult Brazil, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. In another four compare the likely impacts of graduate-driven and
Population Survey 2022
economies, the graduate new entrepreneurship non-graduate-driven new businesses, in terms
rate was at least double that of non-graduates: of the potential high-impact variables identified
Israel, Romania, Cyprus and Luxembourg. Survey in Chapter 5, including job growth expectations,
results for Israel showed no non-graduate starting product and process innovation, and export
or running a new business in 2022. orientation.

6.5  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


This chapter has demonstrated that the cost-effective, new-business-seeking resources
propensity for new entrepreneurship can vary should be targeted at those most likely to start
considerably between groups, providing scope their own business, such as younger people or
for policy measures to support and encourage graduates.
under-represented groups in starting and running
their businesses. If effective, such measures could
help both the individual, in terms of realizing
45 Once more, keep in mind that between-economy
their own potential, and society, in terms of
differences may be more important than between-
overall jobs, incomes and value-added. There is, group differences in the same economy. The
of course, an alternative narrative — that, to be correlation coefficient between graduate and
non-graduate TEA is 0.914.

92 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


This all suggests a very important role for sufficiently sized APS sample sizes, analysis could
governments, both in creating an entrepreneurial extend to subgroups, such as older women.
environment that is enabling and supportive, At the same time, and as emphasized
and, if inclusion is an objective, in targeting throughout this chapter, it is important to keep
encouragement and resources at under- in mind that, while these within-economy group
represented groups to start their own businesses. differences may be significant, between-economy
The specific under-represented groups considered differences can be rather more substantial. Put
in this chapter were women, older people and another way, an older woman non-graduate in a
non-graduates, but there is scope within the GEM high-TEA economy (such as Guatemala) may be
dataset to identify others, such as those living in much more likely to start a new business than a
large multi-person households, or those with low younger, male graduate in a low-TEA economy
per capita household income. In economies with (such as Poland).

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 93


7
Exiting a Business
Stephen Hill and Thomas Schøtt

7.1  INTRODUCTION
This report emphasizes the role of the individual important in helping to translate new business
decision to start a business, crucial to both the intentions into new businesses.
prospects of that individual and to the wider Besides, there are many reasons for exiting a
economy and society. Deciding to exit a business business, and it is unwise to presume that all these
is also an important part of the entrepreneurial reasons are negative. Positive reasons can include
pipeline, and an essential ingredient in a selling a profitable business, receiving a good job
dynamic economy. Just as starting a business offer, a new and better business proposition, or
engages resources to provide new goods and a planned and well-earned retirement. Nor is it
services, exiting a business allows resources to appropriate to assume that the business closes
be redeployed elsewhere. Both the new start and just because the individual exits. The business
the business exit are shifting productive capacity may transfer to new owners, which could include
away from the goods and services people no previous employees, and then continue into
longer want or wish to pay for and towards those the future. This chapter will show that, in many
that they do. Hence it is important that businesses economies, especially higher-income ones, a third
be allowed to fail, and that the costs of doing or more of those individuals exiting a business
so be manageable. Productive resources freed report that the business then continues.
up by exit can include the time and effort of the The most obvious reason to exit a business is
entrepreneur, who may exit the business a little because that business has proved unprofitable.
older and wiser, and hence better placed to build In these circumstances it may be better to close
on that experience in a new endeavour. the business quickly than to continue to add to
Just as new starts can be encouraged by accumulated losses. Other closure reasons include
reducing the costs of entry, so can exits be the burden of taxes or bureaucracy, difficulty
deterred by excessive costs. There is a relationship in accessing resources including finance, or
between the two: individuals will be less some personal reason. Recent years have seen
likely to start a business if exiting a business the COVID-19 pandemic added to the list of exit
is financially expensive, or seen as socially or reasons, either because of illness, or supply
culturally undesirable. Recall from Chapter 2 difficulties, or because of shifting markets as
that, in many economies, around half of those people and businesses adjust to living and working
who saw good opportunities to start a business differently. This chapter will include a brief
would be deterred by the fear of failure. Reducing assessment of the prevalence of pandemic-related
the perceived risks and costs of failure can be reasons for business exits over the past few years.

7.2  EXIT RATES AND TOTAL EARLY-STAGE ENTREPRENEURIAL


ACTIVITY (TEA)
The GEM Adult Population Survey (APS) asks is illustrated in Figure 7.1. The exit rate ranged
respondents if, in the past 12 months they from less than one in 50 adults in four economies
had “sold, shut down, discontinued or quit a (Norway, Romania, Hungary and Taiwan), to
business they owned and managed, any form of
self-employment or selling goods and services to
anyone”.46 The proportion of adults answering 46 Anyone answering yes is regarded as exiting a
business. The business exited may be nascent, new,
yes, for each GEM participating economy in 2022,
recent or well established.

94 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


16

14

12
% adults 18–64

10

0
China
Morocco
South Africa
Venezuela
India
Colombia
Guatemala
Iran
Tunisia
Togo
Egypt
Indonesia
Brazil
Romania
Hungary
Taiwan
Greece
Croatia
Puerto Rico
Serbia
Poland
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Chile
Mexico
Uruguay
Panama
Oman
Norway
Japan
Switzerland
Slovenia
Spain
United Kingdom
Republic of Korea
France
Austria
Israel
Sweden
Cyprus
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Germany
Netherlands
Canada
Qatar
United States
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 7.1 ​
The level of business
more than one in 10 adults in six economies, two So, the lowest levels of both exit rates and TEA exits in the previous
each from Level C (Indonesia and Brazil), Level B are within Europe, while the highest rates of exit 12 months (% adults)
(Panama and Oman) and Level A (Saudi Arabia and TEA are in Latin and North America, and in Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022
and the United Arab Emirates). On the whole, the Gulf. This may point to significant cultural
while exit rates decline with income level, they differences, with adults in Europe more reluctant
were relatively modest, being less than one in 20 to either start or exit a business than their
adults in 26 of the 49 economies. American or Gulf counterparts.
There are many reasons why exit rates vary The final figure in this section shows the ratio
within and across income groups. One important of TEA48 to business exits (Figure 7.3). There are
factor may be the rate of new businesses. just four economies in which the proportion of
Figure 7.2 plots exit rates against the level of adults starting or running a new business was less
Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) than the proportion of adults exiting a business:
across the 49 economies in the APS in 2022. This Egypt, Morocco, Indonesia and Poland. Given that
scatterplot is of considerable interest, not least many new businesses fail, these economies may
because of the positive association between exit struggle to maintain their stock of businesses.
rates and TEA.47 On the other hand, there were seven economies,
Consider the shaded area contained within a representing all income groups, with more than
TEA rate of 15% and an exit rate of 6%. There are four people trying to start, starting or running a
28 economies represented within that area. Every new business for every one exiting a business:
European economy is in that area, plus seven Puerto Rico, Hungary, Romania, United Kingdom,
others (China, Taiwan, Japan, Morocco, South Colombia, Guatemala and Norway. Given the
Africa, Republic of Korea plus Israel). Conversely, difficult economic circumstances of 2022, a
every Latin America & Caribbean, every North significant proportion of these starts may impact
American and every Gulf economy is outside of on these economies’ exit rates in the near future.
that area, plus Egypt, Iran, Tunisia and Indonesia.

48 Recall that TEA includes nascent entrepreneurs: that


47 The correlation coefficient between exit rates and TEA is, those trying to start, as well as those starting or
is 0.621. running, a new business.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 95


35

30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
25
United Arab Emirates
Togo

20 Puerto Rico Brazil


United States Saudi Arabia
% TEA rate

Tunisia
Iran
Venezuela Canada
15 Croatia
Latvia
United Kingdom Lithuania Mexico
Netherlands
Republic of Korea Oman
India
Serbia Sweden Slovak Republic Qatar
10 Hungary France Cyprus
Israel Germany
Romania Slovenia South Africa Indonesia
Switzerland Luxembourg
Norway Spain Egypt
Taiwan Austria
5 Japan China
Morocco
Greece

Poland
0

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

% exiting rate

FIGURE 7.2 ​Scatterplot of exit rates and Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) rates (both % adults)
Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022

6.0

5.5

5.0

4.5

4.0

3.5
Ratio

3.0

2.5

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

0.0
Egypt
Indonesia
Morocco
Brazil
South Africa
China
India
Tunisia
Iran
Togo
Venezuela
Guatemala
Colombia
Poland
Oman
Mexico
Slovak Republic
Greece
Panama
Uruguay
Serbia
Taiwan
Chile
Latvia
Croatia
Romania
Hungary
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Luxembourg
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Germany
Austria
Canada
Cyprus
United States
Netherlands
Sweden
Israel
Spain
France
Lithuania
Slovenia
Japan
Switzerland
Republic of Korea
Norway
United Kingdom

Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 7.3 ​The ratio of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) to business exits (both % adults)
Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 2022

96 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


7.3  THE PANDEMIC AND EXIT RATES
Among the 32 economies in the GEM APS in all Within the 32 economies, there are some
four years from 2019 to 2022, the rate of TEA groupings with similar experiences. Seven
declined in 21, and rose in 11 economies, implying economies had exit rates that rose in the first
a negative pandemic impact overall on new starts year of the pandemic (2019–2020) but have
(see Chapter 3). A related question is whether been falling since: Morocco, Colombia, Egypt,
the pandemic has led to an increase in exit rates. Greece, Croatia, Panama and the Republic of
The expectation is yes, with the pandemic both Korea. Another six saw exit rates rise in the
making trading more difficult and impacting first two years of the pandemic (2019–2021) but
on the nature of that trade. However, this is fell in 2022: Guatemala, Chile, Canada, Cyprus,
essentially, and once more, an empirical question. Poland and the Netherlands. Both groups point
Figure 7.4 shows exit rates for the 32 economies to a detrimental pandemic effect on exit rates,
participating in GEM over the period 2019–2022. but with some recovery since. But there is
These include seven Level C economies, eight another group of seven economies in which exit
Level B and 17 Level A. While each economy rates actually decreased in the first year of the
has its own story to tell, there are some pandemic but have been rising since: Iran, Latvia,
generalizations that can be made. In the period Spain, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg, Sweden
2019–2020, 17 economies had an increase in and the United Arab Emirates. Each group offers
exit rates, while 15 had falls. Between 2020 and little commonality in terms of income level
2021, 21 exit rates increased and 10 fell, so more or geographic region. A more refined analysis
clearly an increase. But between 2021 and 2022, 14 might look at levels of government support for
economies saw exit rates increase, while they fell businesses, or the lack of it, or an economy’s
in 18 others. Taking the entire period 2019–2022, dependence on consumer services, or its export FIGURE 7.4 ​
The percentage
20 economies saw exit rates rise, while they fell orientation. There was just one economy in which
of adults exiting a
in 11 others. So, again, exit rates have increased, exit rates increased year by year: the United business, 2019–2022
although that increase was not universal. States. Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey
2019–2022

2019 2020 2021 2022

16

14

12
% of adults 18–64

10

0
Morocco

India

Colombia

Guatemala

Brazil

Iran

Egypt

Greece

Poland

Latvia

Croatia

Slovak Republic

Panama

Chile

Oman

Spain

Slovenia

Norway

Netherlands

Cyprus

Switzerland

Republic of Korea

United Kingdom

Germany

Luxembourg

Sweden

United States

Israel

Canada

Saudi Arabia

Qatar

United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 97


7.4  EXIT AND CONTINUATION
As noted earlier, exiting a business need not United Arab Emirates. The upper section of each
mean that the business closes. The business column shows exits where the business did not
may be sold or otherwise passed to someone continue, while the total height of the column is
else, could be taken over or merged with another the level of business exits for that economy, as in
business, or could continue in some other Figure 7.1.
form. Those individuals identified in the APS as Continuation of the business as a share of exits
exiting a business were asked if that business was less than one in five in seven economies, five
continued after they left. Results are shown in from Level C and two from Level B, and more than
Figure 7.5, where the lower part of the column one in three in 19 economies, three from Level C,
FIGURE 7.5 ​ is the percentage of adults exiting a business five Level B, plus 11 Level A. The likelihood that
The percentage and that business continued, ranging from less the business continues after exit increases with
of adults exiting than 1% of adults in eight economies: six from income level. Finally, there were four economies
a business and
reporting that the
Europe plus Morocco and Japan, all the way where over half of businesses continued after the
business did, or up to 4% in Indonesia and the United States, individual exited: India, Taiwan, Serbia and the
did not, continue 6% in Saudi Arabia and 8% of adults in the United Arab Emirates.
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Exit, business continued Exit, business did not continue

16

14

12
% of adults 18–64

10

0
China
Morocco
South Africa
Venezuela
India
Colombia
Guatemala
Iran
Tunisia
Togo
Egypt
Indonesia
Brazil
Romania
Hungary
Taiwan
Greece
Croatia
Puerto Rico
Serbia
Poland
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Chile
Mexico
Uruguay
Panama
Oman
Norway
Japan
Switzerland
Slovenia
Spain
United Kingdom
Republic of Korea
France
Austria
Israel
Sweden
Cyprus
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Germany
Netherlands
Canada
Qatar
United States
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

98 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


7.5  REASONS FOR EXIT
The introduction to this chapter outlined many Exiting a business for COVID-related reasons
of the reasons for exiting a business. Some was very much a minority activity in 2022,
of those reasons may reflect broad economic accounting for less than 1% of adults in 31 of the
conditions across a region, while others may 49 economies. The highest rates of COVID-related
be particular to a given economy. The APS asks exits were all outside Europe: 4% of adults in
those exiting a business the main reason for Panama and 3% in Oman, Brazil and Mexico.
doing so, and then categorizes those reasons into In most economies, other negative reasons far
positive, such as selling the business or some outweighed COVID-related reasons.
other business opportunity, or negative, such as The final issue to be addressed is the changes,
losing money or excessive taxation. Since 2020 over the pandemic cycle, in the share of those
a third, also negative, reason has been added: exiting a business who attributed that exit to
the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Results COVID-related reasons. Figure 7.7 shows the
for 2022 are set out in Figure 7.6, where the lower proportion of business exits attributed to COVID
part of the column shows the level of (previously between 2020 and 2022, for the 32 economies
identified) negative reasons, the middle part that participated in GEM in all three years. Across
are COVID-related reasons and the upper part those three years the highest shares attributed to
are positive reasons. Positive reasons for exit COVID, at more than three in five, were all in 2020
as a share of adults are highest in four Level A (Panama, India, Saudi Arabia and Chile), while
economies: Saudi Arabia (5%), the United Arab the lowest shares were all in 2022 (Saudi Arabia,
Emirates, Canada and the United States (all 3%). Sweden and Luxembourg) and in 2021 (Sweden
At the other end of the scale are 11 economies, and Republic of Korea). FIGURE 7.6 ​
representing all income groups, where less than More generally, in 2020 the share of exits Reasons for exiting
0.5% of adults exited a business for positive attributed to COVID-related reasons exceeded a business: negative,
COVID-related and
reasons. two in five in 11 of the 32 economies. By 2021
positive (all % adults)
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey 2022

Negative, not including COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 pandemic Positive

14

12

10
% of adults 18–64

0
China
Morocco
Venezuela
South Africa
India
Colombia
Guatemala
Iran
Tunisia
Togo
Indonesia
Egypt
Brazil
Romania
Hungary
Taiwan
Greece
Puerto Rico
Croatia
Latvia
Serbia
Poland
Slovak Republic
Chile
Uruguay
Mexico
Oman
Panama
Norway
Japan
Switzerland
Slovenia
Spain
United Kingdom
Israel
Sweden
France
Austria
Republic of Korea
Lithuania
Cyprus
Luxembourg
Germany
Netherlands
Canada
United States
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

Level C Level B Level A

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 99


2020 2021 2022

70

60

50

40
% TEA

30

20

10

0
Morocco

Brazil

Guatemala

Colombia

Egypt

India

Latvia

Oman

Croatia

Greece

Uruguay

Slovak Republic

Poland

Chile

Panama

Israel

Republic of Korea

Norway

Germany

Sweden

Slovenia

Luxembourg

Netherlands

Spain

Canada

Switzerland

United Kingdom

Qatar

United Arab Emirates

United States

Cyprus

Saudi Arabia
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 7.7 ​
The percentage
of business exits this was the case in seven economies, but but by 2022 was 22 out of 32. By 2021 this had
attributed to the by 2022 this had fallen to just one economy grown to 10 economies, and by 2022 was 22 out
pandemic (% exits), (Poland). Conversely, in 2020, COVID-related of 32. Hence, there is clear evidence that COVID
2020–2022
reasons were cited as reasons in less than one in as a reason for exit has declined substantially
Source: GEM Adult
Population Survey five exits in just 10 economies, 10 again in 2021, since 2020.
2020, 2021, 2022

7.6  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


Being able to exit a business is an important part consumers or other businesses fail to buy these,
of the entrepreneurial pipeline, and may play a then ultimately the business will fail and the
significant role in the decision to start a business. individual will exit. This frees up those resources
Chapter 2 showed that, even in economies where to be relocated in the production of goods and
many people see good opportunities to start a services that consumers or businesses will buy.
business, where they think starting a business This is the market system in action, and, while the
is easy, and where they have confidence in their business failing may prove difficult for the owner,
own skills and knowledge, up to half of these that exit is a key feature in the process of resource
would be deterred from starting by the fear of allocation.
failure. Where exiting a business is costly, or Not all business exits are for negative reasons:
socially or culturally discouraged, the fear of in many economies, especially in high-income
failure is likely to be high enough to deter many ones, a quarter or more of exits can be for
starts. positive reasons, such as selling the business or
Exiting a business plays a role in the allocation planned retirement. Nor does exiting a business
of resources and in facilitating structural change. necessarily mean that the business closes. In 17
Those starting a business direct resources of the 49 economies, more than a third of those
to the production of some good or service. If exiting a business reported that the business

100 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


continued (and 11 of these were income Level A be highest where starts are highest, and lowest
economies). where starts are lowest, the latter tend to be in
So there can be many reasons to celebrate the Europe and the former anywhere but Europe. The
individual exiting a business: the reallocation of brief analysis presented in this chapter is merely
resources to more productive uses, the motive for scratching the surface of what may well turn out
the exit may be positive, and the business may to be a rich vein of entrepreneurial research into
well continue anyway. In addition, the exit means the future.
one more person with experience and lessons Finally, this chapter has looked at the level
learned, who may then be in a better position to of business exits over the pandemic period, and
start a new endeavour, or to mentor others who at the changing reasons given for those exits.
are doing so. Overall, there are indications that business exits
The relationship between the percentage of increased in the early days of the pandemic,
adults starting or running a new business and but there is also clear evidence that the share
the percentage exiting a business in 2022 proved of exits attributed to COVID has started to fall
to be very interesting. Not only do exits tend to sharply.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 101


PART 2

National
Contexts and
Economy
Profiles
This part of the Global Report concerns the significance of place, first
by setting out the GEM approach to analysing the characteristics of
place that matter most to entrepreneurial activity, and then by assessing
each economy against those characteristics. This is followed by a set of
Economy Profiles, one for each of the GEM 2022 participating economies,
including a “bird’s-eye view” of key country-specific GEM research results
alongside basic socio-economic data for that economy, plus a policy
roadmap.
8
The Context for
Entrepreneurship

Stephen Hill and Alicia Coduras

“Places carry meanings, memories, culture and people.”

8.1  INTRODUCTION
The focus of Part 1 has been on the individual The new business is located in a specific place
decision to start (or sometimes to stop) a business, in a particular economy. While every economy has
and its relationship to perceptions and attitudes, multiple localities with different characteristics,49
as well as how the impacts of that decision are each economy has its own particular environment
likely to vary with expectations. In this section, for entrepreneurship, which may facilitate or
the focus shifts to the context of that decision, or enable the new business starter, or which may
the entrepreneurial environment in which that hinder and constrain the development of that
decision is made. The importance of that context, business. Some businesses start, and succeed,
and its role in enabling or constraining the in the most hostile environments, while even the
development of the business, will partly depend most welcoming and supportive environment will
on the nature of the business. If selling solely not turn a bad idea into a successful business.
online, an entrepreneur can operate anywhere with Chapter 6 showed that while between-group
a decent enough Internet connection, although differences in Total early-stage Entrepreneurial
even here there will be some interaction with Activity (TEA) can be important, these differences
the locality in terms of premises, relationship to are likely to be dwarfed by those between
Internet provider, receiving and dispatching goods, economies. So there is an imperative to identify
etc. At the other end of the scale, the fortunes of and assess those characteristics of a specific
the street-corner coffee shop, or petrol station, economy that can influence the prevalence of new
may be proportional to the density of pedestrian or business starts, and the development of those
vehicular traffic passing by. new starts into established businesses.

8.2  DEFINING AND ASSESSING CONTEXT


GEM defines the entrepreneurial context of a subject to the direct influence of government, so
particular economy in terms of a number of that the state of these EFCs can reflect government
characteristics, labelled the Entrepreneurship priorities and spending.
Framework Conditions (EFCs), as summarized
in Table 8.1. These key influences are derived
from more than two decades of GEM research, 49 Much recent GEM work has highlighted the regional
experience and knowledge. The state of the EFCs entrepreneurial ecosystem. See, for example,
Sternberg R., Von Bloh J., & Conduras A. (2018) A new
can encourage and enable, or discourage and
framework to measure entrepreneurial ecosystems at
constrain, both the new start and any subsequent the regional level. Zeitschift für Wirtschsfftsgeographie,
growth and development. Many of these EFCs are 63, 2–4. doi: https://doi.org/10.1515/zfw-2018-0014

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 105


TABLE 8.1 
A1. Entrepreneurial Finance: there are sufficient funds for new startups
National
Entrepreneurial A2. Ease of Access to Entrepreneurial Finance: and those funds are easy to access
Framework
Conditions:
B1. Government Policy — Support and Relevance: policies promote and support startups
Summary B2. Government Policy — Taxes and Bureaucracy: new businesses are not over-burdened

C. Government Entrepreneurial Programs: quality support programs are widely available

D1. Entrepreneurial Education at School: schools introduce entrepreneurial ideas


D2. Entrepreneurial Education Post-School: colleges offer courses in how to start a business

E. Research and Development Transfers: research is easily transferred into new businesses

F. Commercial and Professional infrastructure: quality services are available and affordable

G1. Ease of Entry — Market Dynamics: markets are free, open and growing
G2. Ease of Entry — Burdens and Regulations: regulations encourage not restrict entry

H. Physical Infrastructure: good-quality, available and affordable

I. Social and Cultural Norms: encourage and celebrate entrepreneurship

There is no objective measure of the quality in support of the United Nations Sustainable
or level of these EFCs, given that each has Development Goals (SDGs).
multiple dimensions. The GEM approach to their The summary expert-derived assessments
assessment is to pool the subjective judgement for each Framework Condition are set out in the
of a number of identified national experts, individual Economy Profiles of this Global Report
each of whom completes an online National in the pages subsequent to this chapter. In the
Expert Survey (NES). This survey is undertaken meantime, Table 8.2 shows, for each income level,
by at least 36 experts in each economy, often the highest and lowest scores for each Framework
more, each of whom has been selected for their Condition, plus for the two new topics.
expertise by the corresponding National Team and There is considerable positive association
approved by GEM. Each expert assesses a number between income level and Framework Condition
of statements that comprise the Framework scores. For 10 of 13 Framework Conditions,
Conditions50 on an 11-point Likert scale from 0 the highest results for Level A exceed the
to 10, according to their view of whether each of highest for Level B, and also do so for 11 of 13
those statements is completely untrue (assessed lowest. All 13 Level A highest scores exceed the
as 0), neither true nor false (five), completely true corresponding Level C scores, as they do for 11 of
(10) or any point in between.51 Because the same the lowest scores. The exceptions are for Physical
questions are asked in all economies, results can Infrastructure and Social and Cultural Norms,
be compared across those economies. In making where very low scores for Israel saw it ranked last
international comparisons, one note of caution is of all the economies for these two conditions.
that those assessments can themselves be context- The highest scores for COVID recovery in
dependent, so that, for example, national expert income groups A, B and C were for Lithuania,
views on the ease of accessing of entrepreneurial Uruguay and India respectively, suggesting
finance may vary with that economy’s level of that recovery from the economic impacts of
development. the pandemic was well under way in each of
The 2022 NES included questions on two new these, while Israel, Oman and Togo scored least,
topics: recovery from the pandemic, and actions implying these still have a long way to go. Not
surprisingly, actions in support of the UN SDGs
typically scored higher in high-income economies.
50 So, for example, for Framework Condition A2 (Ease
of Access to Entrepreneurial Finance), experts are Overall, three Level A economies (Norway, France
asked to assess four statements relating to access and Israel), one Level B (Taiwan) and one Level C
to debt funding, hiring financial support services at (India) scored highest, while three Level C (Iran,
reasonable cost, access to seed capital, and access to
Togo and Tunisia), plus two Level B economies
growth capital after initial startup.
51 A principal components analysis converts these (Oman and Romania), scored lowest.
collective expert views into a score for each EFC.

106 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Framework Condition Level A Level B Level C

high United Arab Emirates 7.2 Taiwan5.9 Indonesia6.0


A1. Finance
low Cyprus3.4 Panama3.1 Venezuela1.9

high United Arab Emirates 7.2 Taiwan5.4 India5.7


A2. Access
low Italy3.9 Argentina2.5 Venezuela1.8

high United Arab Emirates 6.9 Taiwan7.1 India6.6


B1. Policy
low Spain2.9 Argentina1.8 Venezuela2.1

high United Arab Emirates 6.9 Taiwan7.1 China6.5


B2. Burdens
low Spain3.3 Argentina1.8 Venezuela1.7

high Austria7.1 Taiwan6.6 India6.3


C. Programs
low Cyprus3.6 Argentina3.2 Venezuela2.1

high Israel7.6 Latvia5.6 India5.7


D1. Schools
low Cyprus2.5 Mexico1.7 Togo1.5

high United Arab Emirates 7.4 Taiwan5.9 Indonesia6.2


D2. Colleges
low Austria3.8 Romania3.1 Iran3.0

high United Arab Emirates 6.8 Taiwan5.8 India5.7


E. R&D Transfer
low Spain3.4 Poland2.8 Venezuela2.1

high United Arab Emirates 6.8 Taiwan6.9 India5.9


F. Commercial
low Israel4.8 Oman4.1 Venezuela3.8

high Korean R 7.8 Latvia7.1 Venezuela7.1


G1. Entry Dynamics
low France3.7 Uruguay2.0 Guatemala3.4

high Israel6.9 Latvia5.5 India6.0


G2. Entry Burden
low Spain4.1 Mexico3.3 Iran3.1

high Switzerland7.8 Taiwan8.4 China7.3


H. Infrastructure
low Israel3.6 Oman4.6 Venezuela4.0

high United Arab Emirates 7.9 Taiwan6.7 Indonesia6.4


I. Culture
low Israel2.5 Panama3.2 Tunisia3.7

high Lithuania7.3 Uruguay6.7 India6.7


COVID recovery
low Israel4.0 Oman3.9 Togo3.8

high Norway6.7 Taiwan6.6 Indonesia6.0


SDG actions
low Cyprus4.5 Oman3.6 Iran3.1

TABLE 8.2 ​
Entrepreneurial
8.3  CONTEMPORARY ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK Framework
Conditions: highest
CONDITIONS (EFCs) and lowest scores
by income level
The scores representing each framework condition standards. The reality, as usual, is rather more
Source: GEM National
vary on a scale of 0–10. As such, a midpoint score complex. Figure 8.1 shows, for each participating Expert Survey, 2022
of 5.0 can be regarded as adequate or sufficient for economy, the number of framework conditions
that condition. It may be presumed that higher- (out of 13), scored at 5.0 (sufficient) or more.
income economies would be assessed as adequate Only three economies were scored as adequate
or better across most conditions, and that or better in all 13 EFCs: the United Arab Emirates,
low-income economies may struggle to meet those India and the Netherlands. Of the 11 economies

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 107


13

12

11

10

0
South Africa
Togo
Tunisia
Iran
Brazil
Morocco
Venezuela
Egypt
Guatemala
Colombia
China
Indonesia
India
Oman
Puerto Rico
Poland
Argentina
Croatia
Greece
Mexico
Panama
Romania
Slovak Republic
Hungary
Serbia
Uruguay
Chile
Latvia
Taiwan
Italy
Spain
Cyprus
Slovenia
Austria
Japan
United Kingdom
Germany
Sweden
United States
Canada
Luxembourg
Norway
France
Israel
Republic of Korea
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Switzerland
Lithuania
Netherlands
United Arab Emirates
Level C Level B Level A

FIGURE 8.1 ​
Number of
Entrepreneurial scored as sufficient in 10 or more EFCs, seven Spain, fared little better, with just three EFCs
Framework were income Level A, two were Level B (Latvia scored as sufficient.
Conditions (from 13) and Taiwan) and two were Level C (India So while there is, not surprisingly, a positive
scored as sufficient
and Indonesia). One other Level C economy association between income level and EFC
or better (score ≥5.0)
(51 economies, 2022) performed well: China, with nine EFCs scored as scores, that association is far from linear. There
Note: The 49 economies sufficient. are several low-income economies consistently
participating in the 2022 At the other end of the scale, three economies scoring high in terms of EFCs, with very positive
GEM Adult Population
Survey all took part in had no EFCs scored as sufficient: Togo, Tunisia environments for starting and growing a new
the 2022 GEM National
Expert Survey, where
and South Africa. All are from Level C. However, business, as well as a number of high-income
they were joined by of the 11 economies with just two or fewer EFCs economies whose entrepreneurial environments
Argentina and Italy,
who participated scored as sufficient, three were from Level B could and should be a lot better. This may have
only in the NES. (Oman, Puerto Rico and Poland) and one was long-term implications for the growth prospects of
Source: GEM National Level A (Italy). Another high-income economy, each economy.
Expert Survey 2022

8.4  THE NATIONAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP CONTEXT INDEX


(NECI)
It is clear that most economies are good in terms known as the National Entrepreneurship Context
of some EFCs but not so good in others. So it is not Index or NECI.
easy to assess where are the best places to start The analysis so far has considered 13 EFCs
and grow a business, or to compare the relative across 51 different economies. That represents
merits of different economies. In 2018, GEM 663 individual EFC scores, all of which are
tackled this issue head-on by developing a single enumerated in the individual Economy Profiles
number to represent the quality of an individual that follow this chapter. The NECI simplifies this
economy’s entrepreneurial environment; this is picture by taking each economy’s EFC scores

108 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


and averaging them to get an NECI score for that this table, with seven of the top 12 economies
economy. Results for 2022 are set out in Figure 8.2. ranked by NECI coming from Level A, with two
Not surprisingly, economies with lots of EFCs from level B and three from Level C. Certainly, a
scored as sufficient or better also scored well high average income level does not guarantee a
in the NECI. For the second successive year the high-quality environment for entrepreneurship, FIGURE 8.2 
United Arab Emirates tops this league table, any more than a low-income level prevents it. National
and has increased both its score and its lead. Five of these top-12-ranked economies are from Entrepreneurial
Context Index
There is clear association with income level in East Asia, with four from the Middle East and
(NECI) 2022
Source: GEM National
Expert Survey 2022

United Arab Emirates 7.2


Saudi Arabia 6.3
Taiwan 6.2
India 6.1
Netherlands 5.9
Lithuania 5.8
Indonesia 5.8
Switzerland 5.8
Republic of Korea 5.7
Qatar 5.7
China 5.6
Israel 5.5
Latvia 5.5
Norway 5.2
United States 5.2
Canada 5.1
Germany 5.1
France 5.1
Sweden 5.0
Luxembourg 5.0
Japan 5.0
Austria 4.8
Slovenia 4.8
Hungary 4.7
United Kingdom 4.7
Greece 4.6
Serbia 4.6
Colombia 4.5
Chile 4.5
Uruguay 4.5
Slovak Republic 4.4
Egypt 4.3
Cyprus 4.3
Panama 4.3
Morocco 4.3
Romania 4.2
Italy 4.2
Oman 4.2
Croatia 4.1
South Africa 4.1
Spain 4.0
Puerto Rico 3.8
Guatemala 3.8
Mexico 3.8
Poland 3.8
Argentina 3.7
Tunisia 3.7
Brazil 3.6
Togo 3.6
Iran 3.6
Venezuela 3.2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

NECI score

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 109


three from Europe. None are from Latin or North below 10%, while four had TEA of 20% or more.
America. It would be interesting, but beyond the scope of
At the other end of the scale, economies with this chapter, to relate NECI scores to some quality-
few EFCs scored as sufficient featured heavily adjusted measure of those starting or running a
in the bottom 12 of the NECI ranking. Venezuela new business — for example, the share of adults
scored least by some margin. Seven of the bottom starting a business and expecting to employ
12 were Level C economies, with four Level B and another six or more people in five years’ time.
just one Level A economy (Spain). Six of those A quality entrepreneurial context is not just
bottom 12 are from Latin America & Caribbean, good place to start a business. High scores for
with another three from Africa, two from Europe Framework Conditions should also encourage
(Poland and Spain) and one from Asia (Iran). and facilitate business growth and development,
There is a complex relationship between the thereby easing the transition from new to
entrepreneurial context and the proportion of established businesses. As noted in Chapter 3,
adults starting or running new business. Of the 12 the relationship between TEA and Established
economies scoring highest in the NECI, five had Business Ownership (EBO) is also complex. Of the
levels of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity 12 economies scoring highest in the NECI, only
(TEA) below 10%, and just one reached 20% or one (Republic of Korea) had a level of EBO that
more (United Arab Emirates). Of the 12 economies was greater than 10%, compared to five of the 12
scoring lowest in the NECI, only three had TEA economies scoring lowest.

8.5  THE EVOLUTION OF NECI


Earlier chapters have sought to assess the impact just a handful of economies where conclusions
of the pandemic by looking at patterns of change can reasonably be drawn — and most of these
in some key variable (for example, the proportion point to improvements in their entrepreneurial
of adults seeing business opportunities, or environment.
those investing in someone else’s startup), The NECI score for South Africa has been
from 2019–2022. Most of these comparisons steadily improving, from 3.6 in 2019 to 4.1 in 2022.
have pointed to a mild deterioration, although There is a similar story for Croatia, up from 3.6 to
with exceptions. Data are available to make the 4.1 over the same period, with its near-neighbour
same comparisons in terms of the evolution of Greece also improving, from 4.1 to 4.6. The most
the NECI: can the pandemic be associated with rapid improvements, however, were in the Gulf,
improvements in EFC scores, and therefore in the with Saudi Arabia improving its score from 5.0 in
NECI, or has the pandemic typically weakened the 2019 to 6.3 in 2022, while, next door, the United
environment for entrepreneurship? Arab Emirates improved from 5.8 in 2019, when it
However, a major difficulty in making those was ranked sixth of 54 economies, to 7.2 in 2022,
comparisons is that NECI scores usually change the highest of all 49 economies for the second year
very slowly. It is tempting, but potentially running. Both countries have invested heavily in
spurious, to try to attach significance to small improving their entrepreneurial environments,
changes in what are composite scores. Of the 51 and this seems to be paying rich dividends. Both
economies represented in the NECI in 2022, four had levels of TEA in 2022 that were the highest
appear just in 2022 and not in any of the previous of all the high-income economies apart from the
three years, so no comparisons can be made. A United States, while the level of EBO in the United
further seven economies participated twice in Arab Emirates was at least twice that of any other
the period 2019 to 2022, but none had a change economy in the top 12 of the NECI league.
in NECI greater than 0.3. Another 14 economies Rather less positively, there are two economies
saw their NECI scores vary by very little over the whose entrepreneurial environment has
period (no more than 0.3 overall), making it very substantially worsened over the pandemic period.
difficult to draw conclusions. There are a further The NECI score for Mexico fell from 4.7 in 2019
16 economies whose scores did vary substantially, to 4.1 in 2020, improved slightly to 4.2 in 2021
but these went down and then up, or up and then before falling again to 3.9 in 2022. Mexico had
down, so no clear picture emerges. This leaves ranked 23rd of 54 economies in 2019 in terms

110 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


of NECI score. By 2022 it had fallen to 44th of 51 Mexico and Spain are heavily dependent on
economies. Spain has fared even worse, with a tourism, badly impacted by the pandemic, but
score of 5.2 in 2019 (12th of 54), reducing to 4.7 in then so too are Greece and Croatia, both of whom
2020, improving to 5.4 in 2021 and then collapsing have clearly coped much better in preserving their
to 4.0 in 2022, ranking it 41st of the 51 economies. entrepreneurial environments.

8.6  THE ENTREPRENEURIAL ENVIRONMENT AND


INNOVATION
The relationship between starting a new business Intellectual Property Office in 2007, and has since
and innovation was considered in Chapter 5, which been published annually, becoming established as
revealed that, with some notable exceptions, very an innovation index. It is calculated as an average
few new entrepreneurs were either producing of two sub-indices, one designed to measure
goods or services that were new to the world, or innovation inputs, such as institutions, human
using unique processes or procedures to do so. capital and knowledge workers, and another to
Technology transfer was much more common, measure innovation outputs, such as scientific
introducing goods or services, or using processes, research and creative products and services.
that were new to the country or to the area. Figure 8.3 presents the scatterplot of the NECI
This section compares the summary statistic for and the GII for 48 economies in 2022.52 There is
FIGURE 8.3 ​
the quality of the entrepreneurial environment, Scatterplot
the NECI, to a measure of the level of innovation of National
52 GII data was not available for Venezuela, Puerto
in an economy: the Global Innovation Index Entrepreneurial
Rico and Taiwan. All GII data for 2022 are from
Context Index and
(GII). The GII was first introduced by the World https://www.wipo.int.
Global Innovation
Index scores
(both for 2022)

70

Switzerland
Sweden United States
60 United Kingdom
Germany Netherlands
Republic of Korea
France
Japan China

50 Austria Canada Israel


Luxembourg Norway
Italy Cyprus
Spain
Global Innovation Index

Hungary United Arab Emirates


40 Slovenia
Slovak Republic Lithuania
Poland
Croatia Chile Latvia India
Iran Greece
Mexico Romania Qatar Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Brazil Uruguay
30 Colombia
Tunisia
Morocco Indonesia
Argentina Oman
Panama
South Africa
Egypt
20
Guatemala
Togo

10

3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5

National Entrepreneurial Context Index

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 111


some positive association, but also a wide variety sufficient entrepreneurial environment (NECI
of outliers. Note that the NECI scale is truncated ≥5.0), six scored less than 40 in the GII (Saudi
(going from 3.0 and 7.5) to allow a focus on Arabia, Indonesia, India, Qatar, Lithuania and
differences. Latvia), while of the top 20 ranked by GII (score
GII scores ranged from less than 25 (Togo, ≥40.6), six scored as insufficient in the NECI: the
Guatemala and Egypt, all income Level C) to United Kingdom, Austria, Cyprus, Italy, Spain
over 60 (Sweden, United States and Switzerland, and Slovenia. If there are generalizations to be
all Level A). Indeed, the GII may have a closer made, it appears that the GII may reflect what are
association to income level than the NECI; when long-established high-income economies (United
ranked by GII score, seven of the bottom 10 are Kingdom, Sweden, United States), while the NECI
income Level C, while nine of the top 10 are Level may reflect economic newcomers such as the
A: China being the exception. Of the 48 economies United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and India.
for which there are scores for both indices, 28 A closer analysis reveals some positive
scored less than 40 in the GII, and just 13 scored association between individual EFC scores
more than 50. and the GII. The three Framework Conditions
A number of economies score relatively with the highest degree of association were the
highly in the NECI but modestly in the GII. These sufficiency of entrepreneurial finance (A1 in
include the United Arab Emirates (7.2 NECI, Table 8.1), research and development transfers
42.1 GII), Saudi Arabia (6.3, 33.4) and India (6.1, (E) and ease of access to entrepreneurial finance
36.6). Conversely, a number of economies score (A2).53 Higher scores in these EFCs are associated
highly in the GII but modestly in the NECI. with higher levels in the GII. None are surprising,
These include the United States (5.2, 61.8), given innovation can be very expensive, and that
Sweden (5.0, 6.6) and the United Kingdom (4.7, research and development transfers can take a
59.7). Of the 21 economies scored as having a long time.

8.7  CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS


The entrepreneurial environment is defined and support entrepreneurship may ultimately
and assessed by GEM in terms of specific challenge their high-income status.
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions (EFCs), Of the 51 economies participating in the 2022
the quality of each of which is drawn from the GEM National Expert Survey, the United Arab
assessments of at least 36 identified national Emirates had by far the highest NECI score, and
experts in each economy. These pooled scores hence may be the best place to start and grow
are transformed into a score for each EFC, which a business. A high average income does not
are then averaged to calculate the National guarantee a high NECI score, but clearly helps:
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) for each in the NECI league table, the bottom four are all
economy. low-income economies.
While EFC scores and the NECI have a positive The evolution of NECI scores over the
association with income, a number of low-income pandemic period showed no clear pattern, beyond
economies have scores that reveal a quality of the unequivocal statement that South Africa,
entrepreneurial environment that belies their Croatia, Greece, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
lack of resources: for example, India, Indonesia Emirates have all steadily improved their NECI
and China each had nine or more EFCs (out of scores, while both Mexico and Spain have fallen
13), scored as sufficient or better. Only seven of 22 dramatically down the NECI league table.
high-income economies could match or improve Finally, this chapter sought some association
on this. These low-income economies have leapt between the NECI and innovation, as measured
enthusiastically onto the entrepreneurial support by the World Intellectual Property Office’s Global
train, and are reaping rewards. Innovation Index (GII). Both the GII and NECI
At the other end of the scale, two high-income have some positive association with income level,
economies, Spain and Italy, had three or fewer
EFCs scored as sufficient. Given their low scores,
their inability or unwillingness to encourage 53 With respective correlation coefficients of 0.62, 0.57
and 0.56.

112 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


but some economies fare much better in one eighth, 15th, 21st and 25th, respectively, in terms
index than the other. The United Arab Emirates, of the NECI. The difference may reflect the fact
Saudi Arabia and India were in the top four in the that the latter four have had much longer as
NECI league, but 19th, 31st and 24th respectively high-income economies and therefore have had
in terms of GII.54 Meanwhile, Switzerland, the more time to develop the research institutions
United States, Sweden and the United Kingdom and technology transfers that feature heavily in
represented the top four in the GII, but ranked the GII.

54 Taiwan was also in the top four in the NECI, but does
not appear in the GII league table.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 113


ECONOMY PROFILE

Argentina
Q Population (2021): 45.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 23.6 thousand (World Bank)

Argentina did not participate in the


2022 Adult Population Survey.

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Argentina
I. Social and 3.2 (15/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 2.5 (16/16)
4.1 (11/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.0 (9/16) 6
1.8 (16/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.1 (11/16) 1.8 (16/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.7 (2/16) 3.2 (16/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.6 (13/16) 2.7 (7/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.0 (14/16) 5.0 (6/16) recorded in brackets

114 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Argentinian economy grew by just over 4% in Dynamics, the three conditions scored as sufficient
2022, but with inflation (around 100%), a deteriorating or better included Physical Infrastructure and
labour market, and the historic association to the Entrepreneurial Education: Post-School.
dollar, all pointing to a slowdown in 2023. High inflation The product of this mixture of a few good scores and
increases business uncertainty, especially in relation to many poor ones is that the Argentinian entrepreneurial
the costs of labour, logistics and other resources. environment had an overall quality rating of 3.7, much
less than sufficient, and placing Argentina 46th out
of the 51 GEM participating economies. A low-quality
2022 Framework Conditions Review environment such as this is one in which it is difficult
In 2022, Argentina had a very wide range of for those starting new businesses to access the
Entrepreneurial Framework Condition scores, from a finance, markets and other resources necessary to be
very poor 1.8 for both government policy conditions able to develop and grow that business.
(Support and Relevance, and Taxes and Bureaucracy)
to an almost excellent 6.7 for Ease of Entry: Market
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
Dynamics. However, there were more low scores than
high, with 10 conditions assessed as insufficient (i.e. Argentina did not participate in the 2022 GEM Adult
<5.0), including three poor (score 3.0–4.0) and four very Population Survey.
poor (score <3.0). In addition to Ease of Entry: Market

Institution Team Funders Contact

Lead institution Team leader IAE Business School [email protected]


IAE Business School Silvia Torres Carbonell [email protected]

Website Team members


APS vendor
https://www.iae.edu.ar/ Araceli Calja Estrategia&Gestión MDQ SRL
Victoria Galera FAWARIS

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 115


ECONOMY PROFILE

Austria
Q Population (2021): 9.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 58.4 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
50.9 29
business
To make a difference in the world 37.9 35
Good opportunities to start a business in my
49.5 33
area To build great wealth or very high income 37.4 46
It is easy to start a business 48.4 24= To continue a family tradition 19.1 43
Personally have the skills and knowledge 53.2 33 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 46.0 42
Fear of failure (opportunity) 37.9 40
Entrepreneurial intentions* 5.4 47
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.8 40 6.1 7.4
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 8.3 15= 6.1 10.6
1.1 43= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 22.9 6 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 69.3 38 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 67.4 40 Pandemic has led household income to
32.0 36
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 34.7 8
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 41.3 25=
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
43.6 36
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 34.9 35

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Austria
I. Social and 5.0 (12/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.6 (15/22)
3.9 (19/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.5 (5/22) 6
4.2 (17/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.5 (7/22) 4.7 (18/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.7 (19/22) 7.1 (1/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.1 (9/22) 2.2 (22/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.4 (14/22) 3.8 (22/22) recorded in brackets

116 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
GDP growth for Austria in 2022 was forecast at 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
just under 5%, with rising energy costs pushing
Entrepreneurial activity data for Austria suggest
inflation above 10% from September onwards.
a slow recovery from the economic impacts of
Unemployment remained relatively low, at around
COVID-19. The percentage of adults starting or
5%. High prices meant a challenging environment for
running a new business has increased slightly (from
entrepreneurship, with increases in energy costs and
6.2% to 6.8%), but is still lower than pre-COVID rates.
rising interest rates leading to declining margins. High
On the other hand, the level of EBO returned to
product and service prices pointed to a deteriorating
pre-COVID levels by increasing from 7.8% to 8.3%. In
consumer market.
2022, 5.4% of adults intended to start a business in
The aws (Austrian Promotional Bank) launched
the next three years, compared to 7% in 2020, both
several funding programs for startups in 2022, and in
figures relatively low, even by European standards.
October an update of the “Red-White-Red Card” was
Finally in 2022, 7.7% of adults had invested in
introduced, to reduce labour shortages by facilitating
someone else’s startup, up from 7.3% in 2020. So all
access to the Austrian labour market for non-EU
of these entrepreneurial variables had nudged up
citizens.
slightly over the two years.
While the proportion of Austrian adults who
2022 Framework Conditions Review knew someone who had started their own business
remained just above a half, one area of significant
Austria last participated in GEM in 2020, so there change was in the proportion of adults seeing
is some opportunity to compare the situation local good conditions to start a business, up from
immediately after the start of COVID to that of 2022. just under a third in 2020 to a half in 2022. A half of
In both years, Austrian Framework Conditions present Austrian adults knew someone who had started a new
an enigma — with islands of excellence in a sea of business recently, or considered themselves to have
mediocrity. As a result, the overall score for Austria’s the skills and experience to start their own. So Austria
entrepreneurial environment, as measured by the had no shortage of opportunity recognition, or of
National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI), is entrepreneurial role models, and no lack of confidence,
remarkably consistent, and distinctly average. In 2020, although of those who saw good conditions to start a
Austria scored 4.8 overall, placing it 18th. By 2022, business, just over a third would be deterred by fear of
Austria also scored 4.8 overall and was ranked 22nd. failure.
Yet this is an economy with demonstrable “Earning a living because jobs are scarce” was the
excellence in some Framework Conditions. Its score most commonly agreed motivation in 2022, followed
of 7.1 for Government Entrepreneurial Programs by “making a difference in the world”, just as they were
was the highest of all 51 economies participating in 2020. The proportion reporting they have customers
in the National Expert Survey. Its score of 7.5 for outside of the country declined during the onset of the
Physical Infrastructure placed it sixth highest. Yet, pandemic to 37% and increased back to 44% in 2022.
in 2022, the same economy ranked 41st out of 51 Two in five new entrepreneurs expect to use more
for Entrepreneurial Education at School, 44th for digital technologies to sell their products in the next
Social and Cultural Norms, 45th for Entrepreneurial six months, while the share who expect to employ an
Education Post-School and 46th for Ease of Entry: additional six people or more in five years has shot up
Market Dynamics. Most of these framework scores from less than 1% during the start of the pandemic to
could be lifted with more commitment and more 16% in 2022.
investment, especially by the government.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Federal Ministry Labour and Economy Market Marktforschungs-Ges.m.b.H.
FH Joanneum GmbH — University of Christian Friedl (BMAW) & Co.KG
Applied Sciences Federal Ministry of Climate Action,
Team members the Environment, Energy, Mobility,
Contact
Rene Wenzel Innovation and Technology (BMK)
Bernadette Frech Austrian Federal Economic Chamber [email protected]
(WKO)
Lisa Mahajan
Type of institution Federal Economic Chamber of Vienna
University (WKW)
Austrian Council for Research and
Website Technology Development (Rat FTE)
https://www.fh-joanneum.at/ Austrian Economic Service (AWS)
Austrian Research Promotion Agency
(FFG)
Joanneum Research
FH JOANNEUM — University of
Applied Sciences
B&C Privatstiftung — eXplore!

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 117


ECONOMY PROFILE

Brazil
Q Population (2021): 214.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 16.1 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
75.8 3
business
To make a difference in the world 75.2 5
Good opportunities to start a business in my
67.9 12
area To build great wealth or very high income 64.3 18
It is easy to start a business 46.8 28 To continue a family tradition 44.1 8
Personally have the skills and knowledge 69.2 12 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 82.0 11
Fear of failure (opportunity) 49.0 15
Entrepreneurial intentions* 53.0 1=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
20.0 8= 17.2 23.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 10.4 7 6.8 14.2
6.4 6= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 2.1 42= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 90.2 4= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 91.3 5 Pandemic has led household income to
56.8 17=
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 19.8 25
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 53.7 12
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
85.4 1
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 64.8 4

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Brazil
I. Social and 3.5 (10/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 2.9 (11/13)
5.1 (7/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.9 (10/13) 6
3.1 (11/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.3 (11/13) 2.8 (12/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.2 (7/13) 3.4 (10/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.1 (12/13) 1.8 (12/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.7 (10/13) 4.0 (9/13) recorded in brackets

118 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Up to July 2022, GDP in Brazil grew by 4%, while 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
consumer price inflation was around 10%. The
The percentage of adults in Brazil investing in
unemployment rate was down to 9%, having
someone else’s new business has increased rapidly
been 13% a year earlier. Government policies have
over the pandemic period — from just 4% in 2018 to 7%
supported rapid recovery for the economic effects
in 2020, then to 12% in 2022. Meanwhile, the proportion
of the pandemic, although rising costs and demand
of adults intending to start their own business rose
uncertainty may have deterred some potential
from a third to a half at the start of the pandemic, and
entrepreneurs.
has remained at this level since.
The Ministry of Economy has introduced reforms
Despite more than a half of Brazilian adults
to the legal system: for example Law No. 182 has
reporting that the pandemic had reduced their
established the legal framework for innovative
household income, it appears to have had little
entrepreneurship.
impact on the level of new entrepreneurship, with
the percentage of adults starting or running a new
2022 Framework Conditions Review business falling slightly between 2020 and 2021, but
remaining high (at over one in five) since then. By
In 2022 the overall assessment of Brazil’s contrast, the level of EBO was heavily impacted at the
entrepreneurial environment was unchanged from a start of the pandemic, falling from 16% to 9% between
year earlier, with a National Entrepreneurial Context 2019 and 2020, and recovering slightly (to 10%) since
Index (NECI) score of 3.6, matching that of 2021. In 2021, then. So, in 2019, Brazil had three adults starting or
Brazil’s NECI score ranked 47th out of 50 economies. In running a new business for every two running an
2022 that rank changed to 48th — because there were established business. By 2022 this ratio had changed to
now 51 economies taking part. two new starters for every established owner.
There were some small changes in individual Under these circumstances, it is not surprising that
Framework Condition scores between 2021 and more than three-quarters of adults in Brazil in 2022
2022, with six declines and seven increases. The knew someone who has started a business, while
greatest fall was in Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics, two out of three considered themselves to have the
while the largest increase was in Social and Cultural skill and experience to do so. A similar proportion saw
Norms. There was also some deterioration in score good opportunities to start a business locally, but, as
for the two entrepreneurial finance conditions, elsewhere, half of these would be deterred by fear of
offset by improvements in scores for government failure.
entrepreneurial policies and programs. “Earning a living because jobs are scarce” has
All of the Brazil individual framework scores for been the dominant agreed motivation for new
2022 were less than the average framework scores entrepreneurs since this question was introduced
for Level C, apart from that for Social and Cultural by GEM four years ago, although agreement with
Norms, which was the same. So Brazil presents a fairly “making a difference in the world” has been rising
weak environment in which to start or develop a new steadily. More than four out of five new entrepreneurs
business, even among Level C economies. Under expected to use more digital technology to sell their
these conditions, many of the new businesses started products in the next six months, while more than
are unlikely to be sustained long enough to become three in 10 expected to employ another six or more
established. people in five years’ time. However, the share of new
entrepreneurs with customers outside of their country,
while increasing, remained very low at just 7% in 2022.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Serviço Brasileiro de Apoio às Micro e Harvest Pesquisas
ANEGEPE Simara Greco Pequenas Empresas (SEBRAE)
ANEGEPE
Team members
Contact
Vinicius Larangeiras [email protected]
Edmundo Inácio Junior
Rose Mary Almeida Lopes
Type of institution Edmilson de Oliveira Lima
Non-governmental organisation Liliane de Oliveira Guimarães
Paulo Alberto Bastos Jr
Website
Fernando Gimenez
https://anegepe.org.br/

Other institutions involved


Serviço Brasileiro de Apoio às Micro e
Pequenas Empresas (SEBRAE)

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 119


ECONOMY PROFILE

Canada
Q Population (2021): 38.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 52.1 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
47.3 35
business
To make a difference in the world 64.1 12
Good opportunities to start a business in my
58.8 22
area To build great wealth or very high income 65.8 17
It is easy to start a business 63.0 17 To continue a family tradition 38.1 11
Personally have the skills and knowledge 55.4 26 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 58.5 34
Fear of failure (opportunity) 51.8 8
Entrepreneurial intentions* 14.2 30
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
16.5 13 14.8 18.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.2 27 5.4 7.0
3.1 19= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 21.3 10= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 69.9 36 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 75.8 28 Pandemic has led household income to
33.5 33
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 33.8 11
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 49.8 17
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
55.3 19
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 55.5 11

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Canada
I. Social and 5.2 (11/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.7 (14/22)
5.7 (8/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.5 (14/22) 6
5.2 (10/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.6 (18/22) 5.8 (8/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.8 (15/22) 5.6 (15/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.6 (13/22) 3.4 (13/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.7 (12/22) 4.8 (16/22) recorded in brackets

120 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Canadian economy grew by almost 3% in Q3, 2022, 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
driven by improving supply chains and commodity
Around a third of Canadian adults reported that their
demand, combined with lower unemployment (5% in
household income had been reduced by the pandemic
November 2022). In addition, there were reductions
in 2022, a relatively high proportion but down from two
in housing investment and household spending, and
in five in 2020. Both the percentage of adults investing
rising interest rates and inflation. Labour, energy and
in someone else’s business, and the percentage of
raw material cost increases were constraining business
adults intending to start their own business in the next
growth, while inflation as measured by consumer
three years fell in the early stages of the pandemic, but
prices was almost 7% in October 2022.
both had recovered strongly enough by 2021 for levels
The Canadian federal budget in 2022 raised
to exceed those of 2019. Unfortunately, both levels fell
eligibility for the small business tax rate, and
again to below pre-pandemic rates in the difficult
encouraged strategic investment for SMEs in health-
trading conditions of 2022.
focused businesses and increased access to Canada’s
Over half of Canadian adults agreed they have
trade remedy system.
the skills and experience to start their own business,
with slightly more seeing good opportunities to start
2022 Framework Conditions Review their own business locally, and slightly less knowing
someone who has started their own business recently.
Canada, like its neighbour to the south, is a However, half of those seeing good opportunities
high-income economy with a strong tradition in would be deterred by the fear of failure.
entrepreneurship. On the surface, there was little As with the other entrepreneurial variables, both the
change in the overall assessment of the quality proportion of adults starting or running a new business
of the Canadian entrepreneurial environment and the proportion running an established business
between 2021 and 2022, with an unchanged National fluctuated during the pandemic cycle, with both falling
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of 5.1 initially from 2019 to 2020, then rising in 2021 to exceed
leading to a marginal fall in the overall ranking from their 2019 level, then falling below this in 2022. In 2020,
15th to 16th. TEA was 16% with EBO at 7%. By 2022 the corresponding
Beneath the surface, however, there was figures were 16% and 6%. These figures may suggest that
considerable turmoil in the Framework Conditions, some trading conditions in Canada in 2022 were actually
with five framework scores increasing but seven worse than in the early stages of the pandemic. As
falling. Two conditions that had been rated as another example, more of Canada’s new entrepreneurs
insufficient in 2021 improved to sufficiency (≥5.0) in have agreed with the motivation “making a difference
2022: Government Policy: Support and Relevance and in the world” than “building great wealth or very high
Government Entrepreneurial Programs. One condition income” since these questions were introduced by GEM
previously rated as sufficient — Ease of Entry: Burdens in 2019. In 2022, these positions were reversed.
and Regulation — is now insufficient. All three are Finally, substantially fewer new entrepreneurs in
within the purview of the government, so some mixed Canada in 2022 had customers outside the country
messages there. (32%) than either before the pandemic (39% in 2019)
Overall, Canada’s Entrepreneurial Framework or in its early stages (38% in 2020). More than half of
Conditions all scored at modest to good, with Canada’s new entrepreneurs expected to use more
the highest rank among the 51 economies being digital technology in the next six months to sell their
Government Policy: Support and Relevance (14th products, while job growth expectations were strong,
out of 51), and the lowest being Ease of Entry: Market with the percentage expecting to employ another six
Dynamics (34th). or more people in five years’ time increasing from 13%
in 2020 to 19% in 2022.

Institution Cape Breton University Team members Geoff Gregson


University of New Brunswick Chad Saunders Brian Wixted
Lead institution University of PEI Blair Winsor David Clough
The Centre for Innovation Studies Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières Kevin McKague
(THECIS)
University of Ottawa Yves Bourgeois Funders
Toronto Metropolitan University Tasha Richard
University of Manitoba Matthew Pauley Government of Canada

University of Regina Étienne St-Jean Government of Alberta

University of Saskatchewan Marc Duhamel Government of Quebec


Type of institution
Research Institute Mount Royal University Sandra Schillo
University of Alberta Charles Davis APS vendor
Website
Howard Lin
http://www.thecis.ca Elemental Data Collection Inc.
Team Nathan Greidanus
Other institutions involved Chris Street
Team leader Contact
The Centre for Innovation Studies Tyler Case
University of Calgary Peter Josty, PhD Amanda Williams [email protected]
Memorial University of Newfoundland Karen Hughes

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 121


ECONOMY PROFILE

Chile
Q Population (2021): 19.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 29.1 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
68.6 6
business
To make a difference in the world 55.1 16
Good opportunities to start a business in my
50.5 32
area To build great wealth or very high income 54.7 27
It is easy to start a business 51.1 23 To continue a family tradition 27.9 26
Personally have the skills and knowledge 70.1 11 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 69.6 23
Fear of failure (opportunity) 44.9 22
Entrepreneurial intentions* 46.1 7
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
27.0 4 25.2 28.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 7.3 19 5.8 8.8
8.0 4 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 0.5 42 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 88.1 9 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 91.9 4 Pandemic has led household income to
51.6 21
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 16.9 30
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 67.5 4
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
75.4 6
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 63.3 5

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Chile
I. Social and 3.5 (12/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.2 (15/16)
5.3 (4/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.9 (4/16) 6
3.9 (7/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.1 (10/16) 5.3 (4/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.4 (14/16) 5.2 (4/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.3 (9/16) 2.6 (9/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.3 (11/16) 5.2 (5/16) recorded in brackets

122 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In November 2022, consumer price inflation in Chile rank was 17th for Government Policy: Taxes And
was just over 13%, with unemployment around 8%. Bureaucracy, contrasting with 47th for Ease of Access
On the supply side, increases in business costs have to Entrepreneurial Finance. The latter is unfortunate
affected liquidity, access to credit and business growth considering full economic recovery is likely to need
strategies. On the demand side, consumption has significant investment in new businesses.
fallen.
In January 2022, the Ministry of Economy launched
the “Digitalízate Kit” platform to provide SMEs and 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
entrepreneurs access to growth tools including digital Chile has a well-earned reputation for
marketing, e-commerce, shipping and despatch, entrepreneurship that is likely to be enhanced by its
means of payment, connectivity, and cybersecurity. 2022 GEM results. About a quarter of adults invested
Then, in July 2022, the same Ministry launched the in someone else’s startup in 2022, a level that has
Cooperatives and Trade Associations Strengthening remained high throughout the pandemic, while
Program, providing financial support for creating almost a half of adults intend to start a business in the
new cooperatives and for strengthening the next three years, a proportion that faltered at the onset
competitiveness of existing ones, as well as for SME of the pandemic but has been increasing since.
associations. In 2022, more than two-thirds of adults knew
someone who has recently started a new business,
and even more considered they have the skills and
2022 Framework Conditions Review
experience to do so themselves. Half of all adults saw
Despite some turmoil in its Framework Condition good opportunities to start a business locally, but
scores since 2021, with six decreasing, four increasing almost a half of these would be deterred from doing so
and two the same, losses largely balanced gains, by the fear of failure.
so that Chile’s overall score for the quality of The percentage of adults in Chile starting or running
its entrepreneurial environment (its National a new business fell from over a third to a quarter at
Entrepreneurial Context Index, or NECI), remained the start of the pandemic (2019 to 2020), and was
unchanged at 4.5. This placed Chile 29th of 51 just a little more in 2022. Men remain more likely to
economies, a fall from the 26th achieved with the start a new business than women, though not by
same score in 2021 because of improvements in other much. EBO also fell at the start of the pandemic, and,
economies. Chile’s NECI score has hardly changed in despite increasing recently, remains well below the
recent years, having been 4.6 in 2019 and 4.4 in 2020, pre-pandemic level (7.3% in 2022 compared to 10.6% in
so there is no evidence of any significant pandemic 2019). The ratio of new to established businesses has
effect. This finding is supported by a score of 5.4, remained stable at around three to one. Identifying
sufficient but not outstanding, for the assessment of the obstacles that are preventing new businesses
recovery from the economic effects of COVID-19. from becoming established, some of which may be
Individual framework scores have worsened clear from the previous section, should be important
since 2021 for both finance conditions, and all three to policymakers keen to enhance Chile’s stock of
government policy and program conditions. The businesses.
latter is especially disappointing in an economy Unlike in its larger neighbour Brazil, the percentage
with a history of strong governmental support for of new entrepreneurs with customers outside of
entrepreneurship. However, both entrepreneurial the country has been in decline recently, from 7%
education scores improved in 2022. in 2019 to less than 2% in 2020, although around
In terms of Framework Condition scores, Chile three in four new entrepreneurs expect to use more
sits firmly in the centre of the Level B economies, digital technology in the next six months to sell their
with six scores better than the Level B average, products. Job expectations remained strong among
six worse and one the same. Compared to the full new entrepreneurs, with three in 10 expecting to add
group of 51 GEM economies in 2022, Chile’s best six or more new jobs in the next five years.

Institution Other institutions involved Team APS vendor


Asociación de Emprendedores de
Lead institution Chile Team leader Questio Estudios de Mercado y
Universidad del Desarrollo Maribel Guerrero, PhD Opinión Limitada
Universidad Católica del Norte
Universidad Técnica Federico Santa
Team members
María Contact
Claudia Yáñez-Valdés
Universidad Católica de la Santísima
Concepción [email protected]

Type of institution Universidad de la Frontera Funders


University Universidad de Aysén
Universidad del Desarrollo
Website
https://www.udd.cl

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 123


ECONOMY PROFILE

China
Q Population (2021): 1,412.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 19.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
56.3 20
business
To make a difference in the world 14.7 47
Good opportunities to start a business in my
56.5 24
area To build great wealth or very high income 60.9 22
It is easy to start a business 25.9 46 To continue a family tradition 27.2 27=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 54.4 28 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 60.3 32
Fear of failure (opportunity) 56.7 3
Entrepreneurial intentions* 6.4 43=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.0 44= 5.0 6.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 3.2 43 2.9 3.5
1.2 40= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 1.1 42 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 78.4 23 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 85.8 12 Pandemic has led household income to
73.7 6
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 8.5 38
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 84.2 1
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
36.9 40
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 31.3 40

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance China
I. Social and 5.6 (3/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 5.2 (2/13)
6.4 (2/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.3 (1/13) 6
6.3 (2/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.4 (4/13) 6.5 (1/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.0 (3/13) 5.6 (2/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.1 (5/13) 3.9 (3/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (2/13) 4.8 (6/13) recorded in brackets

124 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
China’s economy grew by less than 3% in Q2 2022, of adults investing in someone else’s startup fell
followed by nearly 4% in Q3. This is significantly from 9% to 6% over the period, while the proportion
lower growth than before the pandemic, although intending to start their own business in the next three
there is little sign the pandemic has added to years fell much more steeply, from 26% in 2019 to
inflation. However, business uncertainty may deter just over 6% in 2022. This past year, more than half of
entrepreneurship in the near future. all adults knew someone who has recently started a
business, or agreed they have the skills and experience
to start a business themselves. A similar proportion
2022 Framework Conditions Review saw good opportunities to start a business locally,
China last participated in GEM in 2019, so we are able to although well over half of the latter would not start
make some comparisons pre- and post-pandemic. that business because of fear of failure.
In 2019, there were 12 Entrepreneurial Framework The percentage of adults starting or running a new
Conditions. China was scored by its national experts as business had fallen from 9% in 2019 to 6% in 2022,
sufficient or better (≥5.0) in 11. By 2022, this had fallen relatively low for a Level C economy. Men remain
to eight sufficient conditions, with Entrepreneurial more likely than women to be starting a business. The
Education Post-School, Research and Development proportion of adults running an established business
Transfers and Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation had fallen dramatically over the same period, from
now scored as insufficient. As a result, the overall score 9% to just 3%. One consequence is that, while in 2019
for the quality of China’s entrepreneurial environment there was just over one adult running an established
in the National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) business for every adult starting a new one, by 2022
fell from 5.9 in 2019 (ranked 4th) to 5.6 in 2022 (ranked there were almost twice as many adults starting a new
11th). business as running an established one.
There is no doubt that China has been severely In 2022 the dominant motivation agreed by new
impacted by the pandemic. Nevertheless, it is entrepreneurs in China was “to build great wealth or
impressive that it still had four Framework Conditions very high income”, closely followed by “earning a living
ranked among the top 10 of the 51 economies, and just because jobs are scarce”. Relatively few entrepreneurs
three in the bottom half of those ranks. The experts agreed with the motivation of “making a difference
scored China’s recovery from the economic effects in the world”. More than half of new entrepreneurs in
of the pandemic at 4.9, just less than sufficient, and China expect to use more digital technology to sell
ranked 41st of these economies. their products in the next six months. This could be
aimed at customers outside China, since the share
of new entrepreneurs with customers beyond their
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review country had fallen sharply, from 18% to just 4%. Despite
this, one in five of those new entrepreneurs expected
More than seven out of 10 adults in China reported that to employ an additional six people or more in five
their household income was lower in 2022 because of years’ time.
the pandemic. Maybe because of this, the percentage

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader ShanghaiTech University N/A


ShanghaiTech University Yu Yang

Team members
Contact
Suting Hong [email protected]
Guangwei Li
Wenxin Xie
Type of institution
Qiao Yang
University
Xiyi Yang
Website Wen Zheng
https://www.shanghaitech.edu.cn/ Xiaoyu Zhou
eng/

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 125


ECONOMY PROFILE

Colombia
Q Population (2021): 51.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 16.9 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
63.8 12
business
To make a difference in the world 47.6 25
Good opportunities to start a business in my
53.4 27=
area To build great wealth or very high income 54.0 28
It is easy to start a business 41.4 32 To continue a family tradition 34.5 15
Personally have the skills and knowledge 66.6 17 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 86.6 6
Fear of failure (opportunity) 38.5 39
Entrepreneurial intentions* 21.2 19
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
28.0 2 26.1 30.1
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.1 34 4.0 6.2
7.6 5 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 5.0 35 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 69.6 37 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 76.3 25= Pandemic has led household income to
73.0 7
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 8.2 39
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 50.6 15
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
62.3 11
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 51.2 15

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Colombia
I. Social and 3.6 (8/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.5 (8/13)
6.1 (4/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.7 (7/13) 6
4.5 (6/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.3 (5/13) 3.5 (10/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.3 (6/13) 5.0 (4/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.6 (8/13) 3.4 (5/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.3 (6/13) 5.7 (2/13) recorded in brackets

126 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In 2022, economic growth in Colombia reached over household income in 2022. Perhaps as a result, the
7%, but was expected to slow down in 2023. Despite percentage of adults in Colombia investing in someone
this growth, employment was not yet restored to else’s new business has been falling since 2020,
pre-pandemic levels, and unemployment was almost from 9% then to 4% in 2022. The proportion of adults
10%, although down on the previous year. Informality intending to start a business in the next three years
was high, with GEM Colombia estimating that just over has also declined over this period, from 43% in 2020 to
a third of new entrepreneurs, and just over a half of 21% in 2022. This is despite two-thirds of adults in 2022
established entrepreneurs, were registered with the knowing someone who has recently started a business
Chamber of Commerce. and a similar proportion believing they have the skills
Inflation in 2022 was expected to have exceeded 12%, and experience to start a business themselves. More
with rising costs meaning entrepreneurs were having than half of adults saw good opportunities to start a
to adopt new ways of thinking and acting strategically business locally, although a third of these would not do
in order to survive. so because of fear of failure.
Both the percentage of adults starting or running
a new business and the percentage running an
2022 Framework Conditions Review established business in Colombia have proved highly
In 2022, Colombia’s quality of Entrepreneurial volatile in the pandemic cycle. The former actually
Framework Conditions, as assessed by a group of its increased between 2019 and 2020 (from 22% to 31%),
own national experts, declined in the six conditions then fell dramatically to 16% in 2021 before rising again
most closely related to government: Government to 28% in 2022. Female new entrepreneurship has
Entrepreneurial Programs, entrepreneurial education moved more or less in line with the males, so a small
at all levels and PhysicalInfrastructure. Largely as a gender gap has persisted. EBO followed a similar, if less
result, the assessed quality of its overall entrepreneurial extreme, pattern to new entrepreneurship, rising at the
environment, as measured by its National start of the pandemic, then more than halving in 2021
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score, declined before mostly recovering in 2022. Colombia still has
from 4.7 in 2022 (23rd) to 4.5 in 2022 (28th). Any further five adults starting or running a new business for every
decline was averted by small improvements in another Established Business Owner, a ratio that has been fairly
three assessed conditions: Entrepreneurial Finance; the stable in recent years. There appear to be some serious
Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation; and Social and obstacles preventing new business transitioning into
Cultural Norms. established ones: the Framework Conditions review
Just five Framework Conditions were assessed as offered no shortage of possibilities.
sufficient (≥5.0) in 2022, down from six the previous Unlike in Brazil and Chile, a relatively high
year. Colombia’s Framework Conditions were firmly in proportion of new entrepreneurs in Colombia have
the middle of the Level C group average, exceeding customers outside of the country, although this has
that average in five conditions and falling beneath it in dropped from 21% in 2020 to 16% in 2022. Almost two
seven. out of three new entrepreneurs expected to use more
The impact of the pandemic on Colombia’s digital technology in the next six months to sell their
entrepreneurial environment is difficult to assess, with products, and the share expecting to employ six or
its NECI score rising at the onset of the pandemic more additional people in five years’ time was relatively
(from 4.2 in 2019 to 4.6 in 2020), rising again to 4.7 in high at just over a quarter, but well down on the one
2021 and then falling in 2022. half of three years ago.
“Earning a living because jobs are scarce”, not
surprisingly, remained the most commonly agreed
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review motivation for new entrepreneurs, chosen by almost
nine out of 10, although “making a difference in the
It is evident that Colombia has been hard hit by the world” was also chosen by more than a half of the new
pandemic, with more than seven out of 10 adults entrepreneurs.
reporting that the pandemic had reduced their

Institution Type of institution Fabian Osorio Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de


University Nathaly Pinzón Cali
Lead institution Mariangela López Universidad del Norte
Website
Universidad Icesi Andrea Cajigas Institución Universitaria Americana
www.gemcolombia.org
Jana Schmutzler Universidad EAN
Liyis Gomez
Team
Vera Santiago Martínez APS vendor
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Team leader Jairo Orozco
INFO Investigaciones S.A.S.
Cali Ana Carolina Martínez Romero Leon Dario Parra
Universidad del Norte (Universidad Icesi)
Contact
Universidad EAN Team members Funders
Institución Universitaria Americana Jhon Alexander Moreno Barragán [email protected]
iNNpulsa Colombia Universidad Icesi
Fernando Pereira Laverde

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 127


ECONOMY PROFILE

Croatia
Q Population (2021): 3.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 33.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
66.5 8
business
To make a difference in the world 40.8 31=
Good opportunities to start a business in my
60.0 21
area To build great wealth or very high income 48.8 32
It is easy to start a business 34.0 39 To continue a family tradition 26.7 29
Personally have the skills and knowledge 73.6 9 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 70.2 21
Fear of failure (opportunity) 48.6 16
Entrepreneurial intentions* 19.5 21
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
13.2 17 9.5 17.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 3.4 42 2.5 4.3
3.4 17 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 25.1 4 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 81.0 19 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 82.5 18= Pandemic has led household income to
19.3 48
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 32.7 13
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 32.2 38
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
50.1 26
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 34.8 36

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Croatia
I. Social and 4.8 (4/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.1 (6/16)
3.4 (15/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.5 (13/16) 6
3.1 (10/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.8 (13/16) 3.7 (12/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.5 (3/16) 3.9 (10/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.0 (11/16) 2.9 (6/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.4 (10/16) 3.8 (14/16) recorded in brackets

128 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
With the help of government support for businesses, Croatian adults invest in someone else’s new business,
the Croatian economy survived the global health at around 6%, a figure that has been consistent
crisis, and is getting through the global energy crisis throughout the pandemic cycle. However, the
without losing many jobs. Real GDP is expected to proportion intending to start their own business in
have grown by more than 6% in 2022, while inflation the next three years rose in the early stages of the
edged above 10%. This inflation is challenging business pandemic, from 26% in 2019 to 31% in 2020, before
supply chains and reducing the purchasing power of falling steadily back to 20% in 2022.
consumers. Croatian adults have good awareness of
Since 2020, the Croatian government has intervened entrepreneurship and are not lacking confidence in
to support micro, small and medium-sized businesses, their own abilities. More than two out of three know
with interventions to support jobs extended into 2022. someone who has started a business recently, while
three-quarters consider they have the skills and
experience to start their own. Three in five see good
2022 Framework Conditions Review opportunities to start a business locally, although
Croatia has a relatively weak entrepreneurial about a half of these would be deterred by fear of
environment, with 10 of 13 conditions rated as failure.
insufficient (<5.0) in 2022. Nevertheless, that As with business intentions, the percentage of
entrepreneurial environment is improving, with adults starting or running their own business has
11 individual conditions seeing their assessments mostly been rising throughout the pandemic, from
improve in 2022 compared to 2021. As a result, the 10.5% in 2019 to 13.2% in 2022. Men remain more likely
quality of Croatia’s entrepreneurial environment to be starting a new business, with seven men starting
pushed its overall National Entrepreneurship Context a new business for every four women doing the same
Index (NECI) score up from 3.9 in 2021 to 4.1 in 2022, in 2022. The proportion of established businesses is
improving Croatia’s ranking from 43rd to 39th among relatively low in Croatia (3.4% in 2022), little changed
GEM economies. from the start of the pandemic. As a result, the ratio
Most of the individual framework score of new to established businesses has increased
improvements were modest, with the largest from three to one in 2019 to four to one in 2022. The
being for Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics. The two long-term failure to convert new into established
framework scores that fell over the period were businesses is a concern.
for Government Entrepreneurial Programs and for More than seven out of 10 Croatian new
PhysicalInfrastructure. There are clearly considerable entrepreneurs agree with the motivation “to earn a
efforts being made to improve Croatia’s Framework living because jobs are scarce”, which has dominated
Conditions, including entrepreneurial finance and agreement since this question was introduced by
education, but there is a long way to go to make GEM in 2019. Meanwhile, the proportion of new
Croatia an encouraging and supportive place in which entrepreneurs with customers beyond Croatia has
to start and grow a business. been rising, from four in 10 in 2019 to more than a
half in 2022. A similar proportion expect to use more
digital technologies to sell their products in the next
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review six months, and job expectations are fairly strong, with
around a quarter expecting to employ another six or
In 2022, one in five adults in Croatia reported that their more people in five years’ time, more or less the same
household income was reduced by the pandemic, proportion as in 2019.
more or less half of the level in 2020. Relatively few

Institution Other institutions involved Funders APS vendor


CEPOR — SMEs and
Lead institution Entrepreneurship Policy Ministry of Economy and Sustainable IPSOS d.o.o., Zagreb
J.J. Strossmayer University in Osijek, Centre http://www.cepor.hr/ Development
Faculty of Economics (EFOS) gem-globalentrepreneurship-monitor/ Croatian Banking Association
Contact
CEPOR SME & Entrepreneurship
Team Policy Centre [email protected]
J.J. Strossmayer University in Osijek,
Team leader Faculty of Economics
ZNANJEM DO IZVRSNOSTI
Type of institution Prof. Slavica Singer, PhD

University Team members

Website Prof. Nataša Šarlija, PhD

http://www.efos.unios.hr Prof. Sanja Pfeifer, PhD

http://www.ices.hr/en/gem Prof. Sunčica Oberman Peterka, PhD

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 129


ECONOMY PROFILE

Cyprus
Q Population (2021): 1.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.6 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
82.4 2
business
To make a difference in the world 45.3 28
Good opportunities to start a business in my
26.8 47
area To build great wealth or very high income 78.3 9
It is easy to start a business 48.4 24= To continue a family tradition 25.4 31
Personally have the skills and knowledge 52.7 34 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 60.5 31
Fear of failure (opportunity) 51.7 9
Entrepreneurial intentions* 18.3 22
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.3 34= 4.9 11.7
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.7 29= 3.9 7.6
2.7 21= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 21.7 9 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 73.4 28 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 70.2 36 Pandemic has led household income to
44.7 26
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 27.1 18
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 56.5 10
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
53.0 24
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 40.1 29

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Cyprus
I. Social and 3.4 (22/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.0 (20/22)
4.3 (16/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.4 (20/22) 6
4.7 (13/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.6 (17/22) 5.0 (14/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.1 (12/22) 3.6 (22/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.4 (16/22) 2.5 (21/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.9 (21/22) 4.3 (19/22) recorded in brackets

130 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
GDP in Cyprus is expected to have grown by just pandemic, some slight recovery and then further falls.
under 4% in 2022, with unemployment falling to just By 2022, just 5.7% of adults in Cyprus were running an
above 7%. Business margins were under pressure, established business, almost half of its level in 2019. A
with increases in costs only partially passed on to relatively high 44% of Cypriot adults in 2022 reported
consumers. that their household income was lower because of
The government introduced its “Action Plan 2022” to the pandemic, back to the levels of the onset of the
attract businesses in key sectors including technology, pandemic in 2020, when the intervening year had seen
shipping, biogenetics and biotechnology. some fall in that percentage.
Few Cypriots invest in someone else’s new business,
although even this small proportion fell in the early
2022 Framework Conditions Review days of the pandemic, with some recovery since. The
National experts’ assessment of the overall quality of percentage of adults intending to start a new business
Cyprus’s entrepreneurial environment showed some in the next three years is much larger, but has followed
small improvement in 2022 compared to 2021, with a similar pattern, falling from 25% in 2019 to 23% in
its National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) 2020 and then to 17% in 2021, before a partial recovery
score rising from 4.2 to 4.3, pushing Cyprus’s ranking to 18% in 2022.
among GEM economies from 37th to 33rd. In 2021, Despite the falls in entrepreneurial activity,
Cyprus had 10 of 13 Framework Conditions assessed as the proportion of adults in Cyprus who know an
insufficient (<5.0), but by 2022 this had fallen to nine, as entrepreneur has increased steadily over the last
improvements in internal market dynamics drove this four years, from just over half in 2019 to more than
condition into sufficiency. The assessment of Cyprus’s four out of five in 2020. The proportion of adults
recovery from the economic effects of the pandemic agreeing they have the skills and experience to start
was largely positive, with a well-sufficient score of 5.5. their own business has remained stable at just over
Cyprus’s individual Framework Conditions are one in two. Paradoxically, the proportion seeing
highly variable in quality, with one ranked in the top good opportunities to start a business locally fell
20 among the 51 economies participating in the 2022 substantially with the onset of the pandemic, before
GEM National Expert Survey (NES): Government Policy: recovering strongly in 2021 and falling back in 2022,
Support and Relevance, and with three ranked in ending the period at 27%, having been 39% before the
the bottom 10: Entrepreneurial Finance, Government pandemic in 2019.
Entrepreneurial Programs and Physical Infrastructure. The motive “to build great wealth or very high
income” has dominated agreement among new
entrepreneurs in Cyprus since these questions were
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review introduced by GEM in 2019, with “earning a living
because jobs are scarce” not far behind.
The percentage of adults starting or running a new Finally, Cyprus is a relatively small island
business declined by almost a third at the start of economy, so its new entrepreneurs are likely to
the pandemic, from 12.2% to 8.6% between 2019 seek customers beyond its borders. The data shows
and 2021. This number is now at 8.3% in 2022. This recent success in doing so, with 29% having such
average masks some gender differences, with female customers in 2021, rising to 44% in 2022. More than
entrepreneurship falling faster. In 2019, there were half of new entrepreneurs expect, in the next six
seven men starting or running a new business in months, to use more digital technology to sell
Cyprus for every four women doing so. By 2022, this their products, and job expectations are strong,
ratio had increased to more than nine men for every with almost one in three expecting to employ an
four women. additional six or more people in the next five years,
The level of EBO has followed a similar pattern from just over one in five in 2019.
to new entrepreneurship, falling at the onset of the

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


University
Lead institution Team leader Ministry of Energy Commerce and
Website Industry
University of Cyprus (UCY) Panos Markopoulos
http://www.ucy.ac.cy/en PwC Cyprus
Centre for Entrepreneurship (C4E)
https://www.c4e.org.cy Team members
Ariana Polyviou
Other institutions involved APS vendor
Constantinos M. Savvides
Ministry of Energy, Commerce and
Cypronetwork
Industry

Contact

[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 131


ECONOMY PROFILE

Egypt
Q Population (2021): 104.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 13.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
32.9 46
business
To make a difference in the world 58.7 13
Good opportunities to start a business in my
63.7 15=
area To build great wealth or very high income 71.9 13
It is easy to start a business 67.7 9= To continue a family tradition 52.6 4
Personally have the skills and knowledge 62.8 22= To earn a living because jobs are scarce 84.8 9
Fear of failure (opportunity) 50.6 12
Entrepreneurial intentions* 47.3 5
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.6 41 3.7 9.4
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 2.6 46= 1.1 4.0
1.7 30= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 2.3 42 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 79.7 20 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 77.2 23 Pandemic has led household income to
72.4 8
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 7.4 41
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 35.2 33
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
64.0 9
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 43.5 25

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Egypt
I. Social and 4.2 (4/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 4.3 (4/13)
5.2 (6/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.6 (4/13) 6
4.3 (7/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.5 (3/13) 3.7 (8/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.3 (5/13) 3.7 (9/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.0 (6/13) 2.3 (6/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.8 (8/13) 3.6 (11/13) recorded in brackets

132 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The deterioration of the global economy has hit the but as less than sufficient in terms of actions to
Egypt economy hard, with increases in the costs of support the United Nations Sustainable Development
food imports, supply chain disruptions and falls in Goals, which is disconcerting for a nation that hosted
currency reserves leading to the steep devaluation the UN Climate Change Conference (COP27) at Sharm
of the Egyptian pound. High inflation, devaluation El-Sheikh in November 2022.
and rising interest rates have all intensified cash flow
pressures on new and small businesses. In 2022, the
government issued a new fintech law to expand the 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
scope of non-banking financial services, and several The proportion of adults starting or running a new
venture capital funds were launched, some supported business in Egypt has been falling steadily since
by state banks. 2020, from 11% to 7% in 2022, now comparable to
pre-pandemic levels. This is true of both male and
female entrepreneurship, with the ratio of more than
2022 Framework Conditions Review
two new male to one female starting new businesses
Egypt scored highly for both Physical Infrastructure remaining roughly constant through that period. At a
(6.6) and Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics (6.3), time when entrepreneurial gender gaps are narrowing
both at levels usually associated with high-income in much of the Arab world, Egypt’s remains stubbornly
economies, and was ranked 20th and 13th respectively wide. More positively, almost two-thirds of those
out of 51 GEM economies. Its Ease of Entry: Market starting or running a new business in Egypt expect to
Dynamics score had risen sharply from the previous use more digital technology to sell their products in
year, suggesting strong growth in domestic the next six months.
markets post-pandemic. It also scored as sufficient The fall in new business starts reflects the decline in
or better (≥5.0) for Social and Cultural Norms and business intentions throughout the pandemic period,
Commercial and Professional Infrastructure, but as down from the 63% of adults expecting to start a new
less than sufficient for the other nine Framework business in the next three years in 2019 to just 47%
Conditions. Research and Development Transfers and in 2022. Similarly, the proportion of adults knowing
Entrepreneurial Education Post-School ranked 46th someone who has recently started a business fell in
and 47th of the 51 economies, both well down from the same period, from more than one in two to less
a year earlier. Entrepreneurial Education at School than one in three. Despite this, over half of Egyptian
scored lowest of all Egypt’s Framework Conditions at adults see good local opportunities to start a business,
just 2.3. Sadly, scores for this condition are so low across while three out of five consider they have the skills and
many economies that Egypt was far from bottom. experience to start a business themselves. However, of
Egypt’s overall quality of entrepreneurial those seeing good opportunities, two in five would be
environment score as determined by the National deterred by fear of failure. Egypt continues to have one
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) was 4.3, slightly of the lowest levels of EBO, halving to just 2.6% in 2022.
down from a year earlier. But that was enough to move Not surprisingly, “to earn a living because jobs are
Egypt from 28th to 32nd in the overall ranking. In the scarce” is the dominant motive by far among new
new questions in the 2022 National Expert Survey, Egyptian entrepreneurs, although “continuing a family
Egypt scored as better than sufficient for COVID tradition” was agreed as a motive by more than half of
recovery, consistent with growth in domestic markets, new entrepreneurs.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader The American University in Cairo — PHI Knowledge
The American University in Cairo — Prof. Ayman Ismail, PhD School of Business
School of Business Drosos Foundation
Team members
Contact
Dr. Shima Barakat, PhD [email protected]
Dr. Hakim Adel Hakim Meshreki, PhD
Seham Ghalwash, MSc
Type of institution Prof. Ahmed Tolba
Business School Prof. Thomas Schøtt, PhD
Website
https://business.aucegypt.edu

Other institutions involved


Ministry of Energy, Commerce and
Industry

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 133


ECONOMY PROFILE

France
Q Population (2021): 67.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 50.7 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
59.7 15
business
To make a difference in the world 23.7 43
Good opportunities to start a business in my
52.4 29=
area To build great wealth or very high income 42.3 42
It is easy to start a business 55.4 19 To continue a family tradition 22.2 39
Personally have the skills and knowledge 49.8 36= To earn a living because jobs are scarce 42.6 43
Fear of failure (opportunity) 41.0 35=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 15.8 26
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
9.2 29 7.3 11.2
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 2.9 44= 2.2 3.7
2.4 25 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 13.6 20 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 74.3 26 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 74.0 32 Pandemic has led household income to
32.4 35
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 33.9 10
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 29.5 40
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
17.6 49
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 39.7 30

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance France
I. Social and 5.6 (8/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.6 (6/22)
4.1 (17/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.9 (12/22) 6
6.0 (5/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.6 (16/22) 5.1 (13/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.7 (21/22) 5.9 (11/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.0 (11/22) 2.8 (17/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.1 (19/22) 5.5 (7/22) recorded in brackets

134 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The French economy was expected to grow by almost in someone else’s new business (7% in 2022). The
3% in 2022, with inflation and unemployment both just percentage of adults starting or running a new
above 7%. Rising prices were reducing consumption business rose to 9.2% in 2022 from 7.7% a year
and squeezing business margins. New measures to help earlier. Most of this increase reflected a rise in male
small businesses in France included some simplifications entrepreneurship (from 8.4 to 11.2%), whereas female
of business regulations and improved eligibility of entrepreneurship was little changed (from 7.1 to
self-employed people for unemployment insurance. 7.3%). As a result, the French entrepreneurial gender
gap widened, with around three men starting or
running a new business for every two women doing
2022 Framework Conditions Review the same.
Despite strong government support for In 2022, three out of five adults in France knew
entrepreneurship, France has long held an ambivalent someone who had recently started a business,
approach regarding individual and collective success, while a half of adults saw good opportunities to
perhaps reflected in the relatively low score for the start a business locally, and a similar proportion
Framework Condition Social and Cultural Norms, considered they have the skills and experience to do so
in which France ranked 39th out of 51 economies themselves. However, two out of five of those who saw
participating in the GEM National Expert Survey (NES). good conditions to start would be deterred by the fear
France scored sufficient or better (≥5.0) for eight of 13 of failure.
Framework Conditions, resulting in an overall National The rate of EBO amongst French adults was
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of 5.1 for relatively low in 2021, at 3.6%, and fell further in 2022
its entrepreneurial environment, matching its overall to 2.9%, implying more than three adults starting a
score for 2021. However, improving scores in other new business for every adult running an established
economies pushed France down the NECI league one. This may suggest that there are obstacles in
table, from 13th in 2021 to 18th in 2022. France scored transitioning to new to established businesses. These
higher than the Level A average for seven framework obstacles could include the dominance of markets by
conditions, but much worse in two: Entrepreneurial established providers.
Education at School and Ease of Entry: Market Three out of 10 French adults reported that their
Dynamics. In the latter, the French score was just three household income had fallen in 2022 because of the
places above the lowest of all 51 economies. pandemic. A majority of new entrepreneurs in France
In 2022, France scored worse in nine framework had agreed with the motivation “to earn a living
conditions, with just three improving their scores because jobs are scarce” in 2021. That proportion fell
and one unchanged. However, most differences were in 2022, and agreement with this motivation was
small, except for Research and Development Transfers, matched with the motivation of “to build great wealth
where the score fell from 4.7 to 4.1. In terms of the new or very high income”, both agreed by just over two in
questions in the NES, France scored relatively highly, five new entrepreneurs.
with well-above-sufficient scores of 6.3 for post-COVID France scores well in terms of the potential
recovery, and 6.4 for actions in support of the United impacts of its new entrepreneurs, with more than a
Nations Sustainable Development Goals, the latter third reporting that they had customers outside of
being the fifth highest score of all 51 economies. the country and with a quarter expecting to employ
another six or more people in five years’ time. One note
of caution is that just 18% of those new entrepreneurs
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review expect to use more digital technologies to sell their
products in the next six months, although that is an
In 2022, under one in five French adults expected improvement from just 9% in 2021. These figures may
to start a business in the next five years, up a little be related to already high levels of digitalization, and a
from 2021, as was the proportion of adults investing well-equipped IT infrastructure overall.

Institution Type of institution Team members APS vendor


Research Institute Jean-Marie Courrent
Lead institution Le Terrain, Paris
University Walid Nakara
Labex Entreprendre (Entrepreneurship) Business School Sylvie Sammut
Roy Thurik Contact
Website
Olivier Torres
https://labex-entreprendre.edu. [email protected]
University of Montpellier umontpellier.fr/en/home-2/ Sophie Casanova
[email protected]
https://www.umontpellier.fr/en/ Justine Valette
[email protected]
https://www.montpellier-bs.com/ [email protected]
international/ Funders [email protected]
Montpellier Business School [email protected]
Team Labex Entreprendre
[email protected]
University of Montpellier
Team leader [email protected]
Montpellier Business School
Frank Lasch and Karim Messeghem [email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 135


ECONOMY PROFILE

Germany
Q Population (2021): 83.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 57.9 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
34.2 44
business
To make a difference in the world 42.8 30
Good opportunities to start a business in my
39.5 41
area To build great wealth or very high income 47.8 35
It is easy to start a business 34.6 38 To continue a family tradition 32.9 19
Personally have the skills and knowledge 36.2 47 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 47.2 39
Fear of failure (opportunity) 44.3 24
Entrepreneurial intentions* 6.5 42
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
9.1 30= 7.1 11.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 3.6 40 2.6 4.5
1.2 40= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 22.0 8 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 61.1 44 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 54.5 47 Pandemic has led household income to
31.7 37
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 29.9 15
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 40.2 28
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
46.0 32
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 45.5 24

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Germany
I. Social and 5.4 (9/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.0 (10/22)
4.7 (14/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.0 (17/22) 6
4.6 (14/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.8 (13/22) 4.9 (16/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.4 (8/22) 6.6 (3/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.3 (6/22) 2.7 (19/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (9/22) 4.9 (14/22) recorded in brackets

136 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Inflation in Germany was around 10% in November 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
2022, with unemployment just over 5% and GDP
The share of German adults reporting a decrease
growth of just under 3%, down a little on the previous
in household income due to the pandemic in 2022
year. The shortage of skilled labour, related to an
increased to three in 10, from two in 10 a year earlier.
ageing society, remains a serious constraint on the
The share of German adults intending to start their
German economy. Rising prices are an issue for
own business in the next three years, which had fallen
young firms, both in procurement and in the sales of
from 13% before the pandemic (2019) to 9% in 2021,
their own products. Unlike larger, more established
rose to 10% in 2022. While the percentage of adults
companies, young firms have few opportunities to
investing in someone else’s new business had also
compensate revenue losses with sales of other (own)
fallen early in the pandemic (from 5% to 4%), it has
products.
since recovered strongly, reaching 8% in 2022.
Some policy support measures introduced to help
In 2022, just over a third of German adults knew
businesses in the pandemic have been continued,
someone who had recently started a new business,
offering considerable financial support.
with a similar proportion considering themselves
to have the skills and experience to do so as well.
2022 Framework Conditions Review However, while two out of five of those adults saw
good conditions to start a business locally, nearly a
Unlike many of her neighbours, most of Germany’s half would be deterred by fear of failure.
Entrepreneurial Framework Condition scores Having fallen significantly in the early years of
were little changed in 2022 compared to one year the pandemic, the percentage of adults starting or
earlier. The largest change was a fall in the score for running a new business in Germany has recovered
Entrepreneurial Education Post-School, pushing strongly since, reaching 9.1% in 2022, above the
that score below sufficiency (<5.0). However, this pre-pandemic level of 7.6% in 2019. EBO has fared
was offset by small increases in other Framework less well, despite rising slightly in the first year of the
Condition scores, leaving Germany’s overall pandemic (from 5.2% in 2019 to 6.2% in 2020). It has
National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) fallen steadily since then, to just 3.6% in 2022. In 2019,
score unchanged at 5.1, just better than sufficient. the German level of EBO had exceeded the level of
Nevertheless, improvements in NECI scores in other new business starts. By 2022, there were more than
economies pushed Germany a little further down the two people starting or running a new business for
entrepreneurial environment league table, from 14th every Established Business Owner.
to 17th. Agreement was fairly evenly split among new
In common with many economies at all income German entrepreneurs across all four defined
levels, Germany’s lowest Framework Condition motivations, with “to earn a living because jobs
score was again for Entrepreneurial Education at are scarce” just about highest among new
School, a score that fell yet further in 2022. It remains entrepreneurs in Germany in 2022. Almost a third of
disappointing that so many economies continue to new entrepreneurs had customers outside of their
under-invest in this area. Last year’s Global Report country, a relatively high figure but well down from
noted that Germany’s score for Physical Infrastructure more than a half in 2019. At the same time, almost
declined slowly over time. This trend continued in 2022, half of new entrepreneurs were expecting to use
with Germany scoring 6.0 for a Framework Condition more digital technology in the next six months to
that had been 6.5 in 2019. However, Germany’s highest sell their products, and almost as many expected to
Framework Condition score was, for the second employ six or more additional people in five years’
year running, for the quality of her Government time.
Entrepreneurial Programs, with that score improving
from last year. So very much a mixed picture, but with
very little change overall.

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


University
Lead institution Team leader RKW Competence Centre
Government funded transfer
Institute of Economic and Cultural institution Prof. Dr. Rolf Sternberg
Geography at the Leibniz University APS vendor
Hannover Website Team members
https://www.iwkg.uni-hannover.de Matthias Wallisch UADS Institut für Umfragen, Analysen
https://www.rkw-kompetenzzentrum. Natalia Gorynia-Pfeffer und DataScience GmbH
de/ Armin Baharian
Lennard Stolz Contact
RKW Kompetenzzentrum Eschborn
Julia Schauer
Christi Degen [email protected]

Florian Täube

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 137


ECONOMY PROFILE

Greece
Q Population (2021): 10.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
28.5 48
business
To make a difference in the world 23.5 44
Good opportunities to start a business in my
36.4 43
area To build great wealth or very high income 56.7 25
It is easy to start a business 31.9 42 To continue a family tradition 39.6 10
Personally have the skills and knowledge 53.8 31 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 63.6 29
Fear of failure (opportunity) 49.5 14
Entrepreneurial intentions* 8.3 40=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
4.9 47 3.4 6.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 13.3 3 10.2 16.5
1.0 45 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 19.1 14 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 72.2 30 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 77.1 24 Pandemic has led household income to
58.1 16
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 17.4 29
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 40.3 27
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
47.3 29
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 21.2 44

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Greece
I. Social and 4.2 (6/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.1 (7/16)
4.2 (9/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.9 (10/16) 6
4.4 (3/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.8 (4/16) 4.7 (8/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.0 (10/16) 4.5 (8/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.6 (7/16) 3.0 (4/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (3/16) 4.0 (13/16) recorded in brackets

138 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Greece’s economy shrank in Q3 2022 compared to the 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
second quarter, as declining net exports and public
In 2022, less than one in 10 Greek adults intended to
spending offset strong tourism. The country’s GDP
start a business in the next three years, a proportion
growth slowed down to 2.8% year-on-year. It looks
that has fallen steadily from an already low base,
likely the Greek economy will have grown by less than
while just one in 40 invested in someone else’s new
5% in 2022.
business, half the level of three years ago. Just over
While unemployment has been falling, inflation has
a quarter of Greek adults knew someone who had
increased, reaching 9% in November 2022, mainly due
started a business in the last three years, while one
to energy price increases. Business margins are being
in three saw good opportunities to start a business
squeezed and profits are down. To reduce energy
locally. More optimistically, over a half considered
costs, the government has adopted support measures
themselves to have the skills and experience to start
for businesses (the fuel pass and the power pass), and
a business, although more than half of these would
reinforced the discount mechanism for electricity
be deterred for fear it may fail. The upshot of all this
tariffs.
is that the proportion of adults starting or running
new business in Greece in 2022 was relatively low at
2022 Framework Conditions Review 4.9%, having fallen sharply from 8.6% in 2020. Men
were nearly twice as likely as women to be starting
Greece has continued its steady improvement in a new business, whereas the gender difference had
entrepreneurial framework conditions, with its quality been marginal in 2019. Women’s entrepreneurship has
of overall entrepreneurial environment as measured more than halved since then, while men’s fell by less
by the National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) than a third.
score increasing from 4.1 in 2019 to 4.6 in 2022, pushing Compared to its new businesses, Greece had one of
Greece up the NECI league table from 40th to 26th. the highest levels of EBO at 13.3%. The level of EBO has
These improvements have largely been across the been fairly stable over the pandemic cycle, while the
board, with eight conditions improving their scores rate of new businesses has fallen. In 2020, there were
since 2021, three scoring the same, and just two 17 adults running an established business for every 10
scoring less. As a result, Greece had three conditions starting a new business — by 2022, this ratio had risen
scored as sufficient or better in 2022, and two more to 27. Not only was the level of new starts falling, it
that were very close to sufficient. The biggest increases appears to be increasingly difficult to transition these
were for Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation and new businesses into established ones.
for Commercial and Professional Infrastructure, while “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” was the
the falls were for Government Policy: Support and most commonly agreed motive for starting a business,
Relevance and for Social and Cultural Norms. followed by “To build great wealth or very high
Despite its Level B status, Greece ranked 12th of 51 income”. Relatively few Greek entrepreneurs appear
economies for its score on Research and Development motivated “to make a difference in the world”, with less
Transfers and 19th for the improving Ease of Entry: than one in four agreeing with this motive, although
Burdens and Regulation, but 42nd for Entrepreneurial continuing a family tradition is relatively important in
Education Post-School. Taken together with the Greece, agreed by two out of five new entrepreneurs in
low score for Entrepreneurial Education at School, 2022.
education is clearly an area in which the government
might wish to facilitate some rapid improvements if
it is serious about the entrepreneurial environment in
Greece.

Institution Website Team Funders


http://iobe.gr
Lead institution Team leader EY Greece
Other institutions involved
Foundation for Economic & Industrial Assoc. Prof. Aggelos Tsakanikas
Research (FEIR/IOBE) Laboratory of Industrial and Energy
Economics at the National Technical Team members
APS vendor
University of athens Sofia Stavraki, MPhil, Phd Candidate Datapower SA
Department of Economics, University Evangelia Valavanioti, Msc
of Peloponnese
Asst. Prof. Ioannis Giotopoulos
Contact

[email protected]
Type of institution
Research Institute

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 139


ECONOMY PROFILE

Guatemala
Q Population (2021): 17.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 9.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
71.5 4
business
To make a difference in the world 80.9 2=
Good opportunities to start a business in my
68.3 11
area To build great wealth or very high income 78.5 8
It is easy to start a business 47.8 26 To continue a family tradition 52.4 5
Personally have the skills and knowledge 77.5 6 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 89.1 4
Fear of failure (opportunity) 43.2 27
Entrepreneurial intentions* 46.5 6
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
29.4 1 28.2 30.8
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 11.6 5 9.7 13.6
8.6 3 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 6.2 33 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 93.3 1 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 93.5 2 Pandemic has led household income to
63.9 13
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 5.4 43
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 59.6 7
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
72.6 7
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 53.0 13

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Guatemala
I. Social and 3.0 (11/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.3 (9/13)
5.3 (5/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.3 (6/13) 6
2.4 (12/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.2 (6/13) 3.5 (9/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.4 (13/13) 3.1 (12/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.3 (3/13) 2.3 (7/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.5 (12/13) 5.4 (4/13) recorded in brackets

140 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Despite the pandemic, Guatemala has maintained a 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
stable macroeconomic performance. Inflation initially
There is little doubt that the pandemic hit Guatemala
came from imported energy and food, but has since
hard. Almost two in three adults in 2022 reported that
extended to local products and services. Entrepreneurs
the pandemic had reduced their household income,
have transferred inflation to the final prices of their
a proportion that was only slightly lower than in 2020.
products and services. Congress passed a bankruptcy
Despite this, the share of Guatemalan adults investing
law in February, which came into force in September,
in someone else’s new business has remained
so it is too early to assess its impacts.
relatively high (and stable), falling just a little from 16%
in 2019 to 14% in 2022. Awareness of entrepreneurship
2022 Framework Conditions Review in Guatemala remains high, as is confidence in one’s
own abilities, with around seven out of 10 adults
Despite national experts scoring Guatemala’s response knowing someone who has recently started a business,
to the economic impacts of the pandemic fairly or agreeing that they have the skills and experience to
highly, the assessed quality of the entrepreneurial do so themselves, or seeing good opportunities to start
environment in Guatemala was little changed in a business locally.
2022 compared to 2021. Both the quality of the The percentage of adults intending to start a
overall environment, as measured by the National business in the next three years has also remained
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score, and relatively high, although falling a little, from 52% in 2019
six individual Framework Condition scores, were to 47% in 2022.
unchanged. That NECI score (3.8) placed Guatemala The percentage of adults starting or running a new
44th out of 50 economies in 2021 and 43rd out of 51 business in Guatemala has actually increased over
economies in 2022. the pandemic cycle, from 25% in 2019 to 29% in 2022,
Across a large number of Framework Conditions although the level of EBO has gone the other way,
(eight in 2021, the same in 2022), Guatemala scores from 15% in 2019 to 12% in 2022. There were more than
poorly (<4.0), and in some conditions (four in 2021, two adults starting a new business for every adult
three in 2022) very poorly (<3.0). In 2022 these three running an established business in 2022, with men
were Government Policy: Taxes and Bureaucracy, slightly more likely than women to be running those
Entrepreneurial Education at School and Research new businesses.
and Development Transfers. No surprise that New entrepreneurs in Guatemala see no
government plays a large part in each of these, as it inconsistency in agreeing with multiple motivations,
does in Government Policy: Support and Relevance with nine out of 10 agreeing with the motivation “to
and in Government Entrepreneurial Programs, both earn a living because jobs are scarce”, eight out of 10
of which fared little better. However, Guatemala agreeing with “to make a difference in the world” or
scored relatively highly for Entrepreneurial Education with “building great wealth or very high income”.
Post-School, giving it its highest rank among the Just one in 10 new entrepreneurs had customers
51 GEM economies (15th). On the other hand, five outside of their country, although this was a
Framework Conditions were ranked in the bottom fourfold increase from 2021. More than seven in
five of those 51 economies in 2022: Ease of Access 10 of those starting or running new business in
to Entrepreneurial Finance, Government Policy: Guatemala expected, in the next six months, to use
Support and Relevance, Government Entrepreneurial more digital technology to sell their products. Job
Programs, Research and Development Transfers expectations were also fairly high, with three in 10 new
and Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics. There is entrepreneurs expecting to employ an additional six
clearly much to do to support entrepreneurship in people or more in five years’ time, up from two in 10
Guatemala. pre-pandemic (2019).

Institution Team Funders Contact

Lead institution Team leader Francisco Marroquín University [email protected]


Kirzner Entrepreneurship Center at Mónica Río-Nevado de Zelaya, PhD — UFM [email protected]
Francisco Marroquín University [email protected]
Team members
APS vendor [email protected]
Carolina Uribe
Jershem David Casasola Khanti Consulting, SA
Natalia Ponce
Type of institution
University

Website
www.kec.ufm.edu
www.gem.ufm.edu

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 141


ECONOMY PROFILE

Hungary
Q Population (2021): 9.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 36.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
47.9 31
business
To make a difference in the world 66.9 10
Good opportunities to start a business in my
27.2 46
area To build great wealth or very high income 37.0 48
It is easy to start a business 47.4 27 To continue a family tradition 21.6 40
Personally have the skills and knowledge 36.8 46 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 57.9 35
Fear of failure (opportunity) 34.0 43
Entrepreneurial intentions* 8.7 38
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
9.9 28 7.9 12.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.9 21 4.6 9.4
1.7 30= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 11.1 24 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 66.6 42 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 80.3 21 Pandemic has led household income to
29.1 38=
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 26.6 19
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 42.9 24
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
37.7 39
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 17.4 48

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Hungary
I. Social and 5.3 (2/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.8 (2/16)
4.1 (10/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.6 (5/16) 6
4.3 (5/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.7 (6/16) 5.5 (3/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.5 (13/16) 4.9 (6/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.7 (5/16) 2.2 (14/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.4 (4/16) 4.4 (10/16) recorded in brackets

142 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
By Q3 2022, Hungary’s GDP was 4% higher than a 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
year earlier, unemployment was just below 4%, but
In recent years (2021 and 2022), Hungary has been
consumer prices had risen to more than 22%. These
participating in GEM, providing some limited
rising prices were squeezing margins and reducing
opportunities for comparison. In 2022, just under one
consumption. Over the course of 2022, the government
in 10 adults intended to start a business in the next
had reduced taxes on labour, introduced some support
three years, up slightly on the previous year. Almost
for the overhead costs of small and medium-sized
half of adults knew someone who had recently started
enterprises, and issued a moratorium on payments of
a business, although less than two in five considered
principal, interest and charges for companies.
themselves to have the skills and experience to do the
same. Only one in four adults in Hungary saw good
2022 Framework Conditions Review opportunities to start a business locally, down from
more than one in three a year before, a decline that
National expert assessments point to some may be related to events in neighbouring Ukraine.
improvement in Hungarian Framework Conditions More than a third of those who saw good opportunities
in 2022, with scores rising for nine conditions and would be deterred by fear of failure.
declining for four. The biggest improvements were in One in 10 Hungarian adults was starting or running
both ease of entry conditions, and in Entrepreneurial a new business in 2022, up slightly from the year
Finance, pushing the score for the latter into before, although a majority of these were male, with
sufficiency (≥5.0). This is a good achievement for an three men starting a new business for every two
economy that appears to be recovering strongly women doing the same. The level of EBO in 2022 was
from the effects of the pandemic, reflected in the 6.5 7%, down from 8% a year earlier
score for COVID recovery, placing it ninth out of 51 If change brings opportunities, it also threatens the
economies. The largest fall in a Framework Condition established order. Despite difficult circumstances, and
score was for Entrepreneurial Education at School, 28% of Hungarian adults reporting a loss of household
reducing an already low score still further. income due to the pandemic, “to make a difference
The net result of these changes is that, in the in the world” was the dominant agreed motivation for
year to 2022, Hungary’s overall score (its National new entrepreneurs in 2022, whereas the motivation “to
Entrepreneurial Context Index or NECI) improved earn a living because jobs are scarce” had dominated a
from 4.5 to 4.7, lifting Hungary up the NECI league year earlier.
table from 27th to 24th. Hungary’s scores were better Perhaps one consequence of regional turbulence
than the Level B average for nine conditions, although has been to encourage Hungarian entrepreneurs to
Social and Cultural Norms need to improve if Hungary seek customers elsewhere. The proportion of new
is to achieve its entrepreneurial ambitions. This score entrepreneurs with customers outside of the country
declined further in 2022, leaving Hungary ranked 37th increased from 16% in 2021 to 28% in 2022, and the
for this Framework Condition. Changing those norms ambitions of those entrepreneurs have also grown. In
must be a long-term goal. 2021 just 12% of new entrepreneurs were expecting to
employ an additional six or more people in the next
five years. By 2022 this percentage had increased to 18.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Budapest Business School — TÁRKI Social Research Institute
Budapest Business School — Judit Csákné Filep University of Applied Sciences (BBS)
University of Applied Sciences (BBS) Contact
Team members
BUDAPESTI BUSINESS SCHOOL
Judit Csákné Filep [email protected]
UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES
László Radácsi
Áron Szennay
Type of institution Zsófia Borsodi
University Gigi Timár

Website
https://uni-bge.hu/en

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 143


ECONOMY PROFILE

India
Q Population (2021): 1,393 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 7.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
47.4 34
business
To make a difference in the world 80.9 2=
Good opportunities to start a business in my
75.5 7
area To build great wealth or very high income 69.0 16
It is easy to start a business 78.0 6 To continue a family tradition 68.6 1
Personally have the skills and knowledge 78.1 5 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 78.0 16
Fear of failure (opportunity) 54.0 5
Entrepreneurial intentions* 20.1 20
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
11.5 24 11.4 11.6
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 9.0 12= 7.6 10.5
1.7 30= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 2.1 42= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 84.7 16 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 74.2 31 Pandemic has led household income to
73.9 5
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 4.8 46
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 68.0 3
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
28.2 48
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 68.8 1

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance India
I. Social and 6.0 (2/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 5.7 (1/13)
6.3 (3/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.7 (3/13) 6
6.6 (1/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
6.0 (1/13) 6.2 (2/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.0 (4/13) 6.3 (1/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.9 (1/13) 5.7 (1/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.7 (1/13) 5.6 (3/13) recorded in brackets

144 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Indian economy was expected to grow by 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
nearly 7% in 2022, with inflation falling from to 6% in
Almost three in four adults in India reported that
November 2022.
the pandemic had reduced their household income
In 2022 the Prime Minister launched a number of
in 2022, the fifth highest proportion of the 51 GEM
initiatives to support small businesses, including the
economies, behind Togo, Venezuela, Indonesia and
“Raising and Accelerating MSME Performance” (RAMP)
Mexico. Even this high proportion in India in 2022 was
project and the “Capacity Building of First-time MSME
lower than it had been the previous two years. So there
Exporters”.
is clear evidence that India has been harshly affected
by the pandemic.
2022 Framework Conditions Review One impact may be that the proportion of Indian
adults expecting to start their own business in the
Comparing across years, a smooth upwards next three years fell from more than a third in 2019
progression is apparent in the overall entrepreneurial to just a fifth in 2022. Confidence in one’s own ability
environment rated by national experts and measured to start a business, although still relatively high, had
by the National Entrepreneurship Context Index also fallen, from 85% of adults agreeing they have the
(NECI). India went from a score of 5.8 in 2019, ranked skills and experience to start a business in 2019 to 78%
sixth among GEM economies, to a score of 6.0 in in 2022. The proportion of adults who saw good local
2020, ranked fourth, and then to a score of 6.1 in 2022, opportunities to start a business stayed high, at four
also ranked fourth. However, in 2021, India’s NECI was out of five, throughout 2019–2021, but fell slightly to
scored at 5.0, only just sufficient, and ranked 16th. three in four in 2022.
One explanation may be that the pandemic These have been turbulent years for the Indian
was a severe, but temporary, shock to the economy, and the proportion of adults starting or
Indian entrepreneurial environment, with all 13 running their own business has fluctuated, falling
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions scoring lower sharply from 15% in 2019 to just 5.3% in 2020, then rising
in 2021 than in 2020. In 2020, all of India’s Framework to 8.5% in 2021 and 9% in 2022. Meanwhile, the level of
Conditions were scored as better than sufficient EBO followed a similar pattern, halving from 11.9% to
(≥5.0). In 2021, seven of those conditions were rated as 5.9% in 2020, then rising to 8.5% in 2021 and 9% in 2022.
insufficient, but by 2022 all had returned to sufficiency. So in the depths of the pandemic in 2020, fewer adults
These changes, many of which were considerable, in India were starting new businesses than running
both in the fall from 2020 to 2021 and in the recovery established ones.
2021 to 2022, suggest a high-quality entrepreneurial In 2022, “to make a difference in the world” had
environment but one that is very fragile and far from the highest level of agreement among new Indian
resilient. entrepreneurs, closely followed by “to earn a living
So, in a sense, normal service has resumed in 2022, because jobs are scarce”. However, the proportion of
with the entrepreneurial environment restored to high new entrepreneurs expecting, in the next six months,
quality, with, for example, all but three Framework to use more digital technologies to sell their products
Conditions ranked in the top 10 of the 51 GEM National halved in the year to 2022, from six in 10 to three in
Expert Survey (NES) economies. The exceptions were 10. This is concerning if the pace of recovery is to be
Entrepreneurial Education Post-School, Commercial maintained. Just one in seven of those starting or
and Professional Infrastructure and Physical running a new business in India in 2022 expected to
Infrastructure. None of these ranked outside of the top employ another six people or more in the next five
20. But there are lessons to learn from the sudden dip in years.
2021, not least that India’s high-quality entrepreneurial
environment cannot be taken for granted.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Centre for Research in Kantar IMRB


Entrepreneurship Development Dr. Sunil Shukla, PhD Entrepreneurship Education and
Institute of India (EDII) — Ahmedabad Development (CREED)
Team members
Contact
Dr. Amit Kumar Dwivedi, PhD [email protected]
Dr. Pankaj Bharti, PhD

Type of institution
Research Institute

Website
https://www.ediindia.org

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 145


ECONOMY PROFILE

Indonesia
Q Population (2021): 276.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 12.9 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
71.4 5
business
To make a difference in the world 48.5 23
Good opportunities to start a business in my
87.2 2
area To build great wealth or very high income 81.6 5
It is easy to start a business 72.2 8 To continue a family tradition 31.0 21
Personally have the skills and knowledge 75.5 8 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 80.6 14
Fear of failure (opportunity) 36.8 41
Entrepreneurial intentions* 33.3 12
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.1 36 9.2 7.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.7 29= 5.9 5.5
1.3 36= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 3.3 42= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 88.6 8 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 84.2 15 Pandemic has led household income to
75.2 4
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 2.3 49
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 34.8 34
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
60.9 13
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 46.7 23

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Indonesia
I. Social and 6.0 (1/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 5.1 (3/13)
6.4 (1/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.8 (2/13) 6
6.2 (3/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.7 (2/13) 6.1 (3/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.0 (2/13) 5.2 (3/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.4 (2/13) 4.7 (2/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.5 (3/13) 6.2 (1/13) recorded in brackets

146 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In the aftermath of the pandemic, the Indonesian 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
economy experienced strong GDP growth in 2022,
There is no doubt that the pandemic has had
reaching 6% in Q3 2022, but inflation was also
widespread impact on Indonesia, with almost three
on the rise driven by increasing commodity and
out of four adults reporting the pandemic has reduced
energy prices. Entrepreneurs were still enjoying
their household income, among the highest in GEM
growth conditions in key sectors including food and
economies. Perhaps because of this, or because of
beverages, and fashion.
reduced access to entrepreneurial finance elsewhere,
In 2022, Indonesia issued Presidential Regulation
the share of Indonesian adults investing in someone
Number 2 on National Entrepreneurship Development,
else’s new business has more than doubled since 2020,
stipulating facilities, incentives and recovery measures
from 6% to 14%. The proportion intending to start a
for entrepreneurs.
new business in the next three years rose from 28%
to 33%. Confidence was high, with three-quarters of
2022 Framework Conditions Review Indonesian adults agreeing they had the skills and
experience to start a new business, with only slightly
Indonesia last participated in GEM in 2020, giving fewer knowing someone who had recently done so.
limited scope for comparisons. In that year, Indonesia Almost nine out of 10 saw good opportunities to start
had a quality of entrepreneurial environment a business locally, and just a third of those would be
that ranked first among the 45 economies then prevented from doing so by the fear of failure.
participating in the GEM National Expert Survey Despite these encouraging signs, the percentage
(NES), with a National Entrepreneurship Context of adults in Indonesia starting and running a new
Index (NECI) score of 6.4, and with all Entrepreneurial business fell from 9.6% to 8.1% between 2020 and 2022,
Framework Conditions rated as sufficient (≥5.0), most with the male percentage falling faster than that for
by a wide margin. By 2022, Indonesia’s position had women. The entrepreneurial gender gap has widened:
changed markedly. Nine framework conditions saw by 2022, there were nine women starting and running
their scores fall, some considerably, to the extent that a new business for every seven men doing the same.
two were now rated as insufficient. It would be easy Still struggling with the pandemic recovery, the
to attribute these changes to the pandemic, but in percentage of adults running an established business
new NES questions Indonesia’s national experts rated halved over this period (from 11.4% to 5.7%). In 2020,
the recovery from the economic impacts of COVID-19 just over 4% of Indonesian adults had exited a business
as well sufficient, with a score of 6.4 (11th of the 51 in the past 12 months. By 2022, this had risen to 11%,
economies). meaning business exits exceeded new starts. These
Delving a little deeper, Indonesia’s Framework declines point to a hollowing-out of Indonesian
Condition scores had fallen most for Entrepreneurial businesses, reflecting very poor trading conditions and
Education Post-School, for Government fairly bleak employment prospects.
Entrepreneurial Programs and for Research and Not surprisingly, the material motivations (“to build
Development Transfers. These are Framework great wealth or very high income” or “to earn a living
Conditions in which the government has substantial because jobs are scarce”) had the highest levels of
influence. So the deterioration may say more agreement among new entrepreneurs, although
about political priorities than about the effects of almost a half agreed with the motive “to make a
the pandemic. However, Indonesia still had eight difference in the world”.
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions ranked in Not many new entrepreneurs had customers
the top 10 of these GEM economies, and just one, beyond Indonesia (less than 5%), although three in five
Commercial and Professional Infrastructure, ranked in expected to use more digital technology in the next
the bottom half. six months to sell their products. More optimistically,
the percentage of those starting or running a new
business who expected to employ another six or more
people in the next five years has risen sharply, from just
3% in 2020 to 16% in 2022.

Institution Website Funders APS vendor


https://unpar.ac.id/
Lead institution UNPAR (Parahyangan Catholic Sapat Institut
UNPAR (Parahyangan Catholic University)
Team
University) Contact
Team leader
[email protected]
Gandhi Pawitan
[email protected]
Team members
Catharina Badra Nawangpalupi

Type of institution
University

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 147


ECONOMY PROFILE

Iran
Q Population (2021): 85.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 15.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
64.1 11
business
To make a difference in the world 34.9 36
Good opportunities to start a business in my
51.3 31
area To build great wealth or very high income 85.1 2
It is easy to start a business 23.7 47 To continue a family tradition 22.8 36
Personally have the skills and knowledge 54.2 29 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 69.9 22
Fear of failure (opportunity) 30.9 48
Entrepreneurial intentions* 27.5 16
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
16.4 14 13.6 19.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 10.8 6 3.9 17.6
5.5 10 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 3.2 42 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 71.3 33 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 68.8 38= Pandemic has led household income to
49.8 23
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 17.5 28
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 62.3 6
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
53.4 23
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 21.6 43

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Iran
I. Social and 3.6 (7/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.5 (7/13)
4.4 (10/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.5 (8/13) 6
3.3 (10/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.1 (13/13) 3.2 (11/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.7 (9/13) 3.1 (11/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.2 (10/13) 2.0 (10/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.7 (9/13) 3.0 (13/13) recorded in brackets

148 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Iranian economy is dominated by its oil and gas, the percentage of adults investing in someone else’s
agricultural and services sectors, with both economic new business had fallen at the start of the pandemic,
activity and government revenues closely tied to the it had since increased strongly, with the level in 2022
global price of oil. In 2022, inflation was expected to (9%) more than double that of 2020 (4%). The intention
top 40%, with unemployment at just under 10% and to start a business also declined with the onset of the
falling slowly. The costs of starting a business (rent, raw pandemic (from 42% in 2019 to 25% a year later) but
materials, etc.) were all increasing, while rising prices only partially recovered since (to 28% in 2021 and then
had increased uncertainty over demand. Many people the same in 2022).
have responded to economic conditions by taking on a The percentage of adults in Iran starting or running
second job, or by starting their own small business. a new business has followed a familiar pandemic cycle
In 2022, the government introduced more pattern, declining in the early days (10.7% in 2019 to 8%
entrepreneurial support, including improvements in in 2020), before recovering slightly in 2021 (8.8%) and
facilitating the issue of business licences, and support then leaping in 2022 (to 16.4%). So, in just two years,
for knowledge-based businesses through long-term the level of new entrepreneurial activity had doubled,
loans at preferential rates. although men remained about a half more likely
than women to be starting a new business. EBO has
followed a more modest path, rising in the early days
2022 Framework Conditions Review of the pandemic before falling back. By 2022, the rate
Starting and running a business in Iran cannot be of EBO in Iran, at 10.8% of adults, was little different to
easy. For the second year running, the quality of the what it had been in 2019 (10.2%). So, in 2019, the level
overall entrepreneurial environment in Iran has been of new entrepreneurship more or less matched the
ranked as the second lowest. In the previous year, Iran’s level of EBO. By 2022, there were three adults starting
National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score or running a new business for every two Established
was just above Sudan; in 2022 just above Venezuela. Business Owners.
Yet Iran’s score improved in 2022 to 3.6, having been On a range of entrepreneurial social parameters,
3.3 a year earlier. This is because Iran’s scores had risen Iran scores well. Almost two-thirds of adults knew
for 10 of the 13 Framework Conditions, demonstrating someone who had recently started a business,
that considerable efforts were being made to improve while more than half considered themselves to have
those entrepreneurial conditions. the skills and experience to do the same. A similar
However, despite these improvements, many of proportion saw good opportunities to start a business
those Framework Condition scores were a long way locally, and less than a third of these would have been
from sufficiency (≥5.0), with nine still below 4.0. There deterred by fear of failure.
is room for more improvement across the board, but “To building great wealth or very high income”
especially in entrepreneurial finance, in business policy was by far the most commonly agreed motivation for
and programmes and in entrepreneurial education at those starting a new business, agreed by 85% in 2022,
all levels, although these areas have already improved followed by “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”.
since 2021. Only one Framework Condition was rated as Only a third of new entrepreneurs agreed with the
sufficient in 2022, Physical Infrastructure, while Iran’s motivation “to make a difference in the world”, and
highest-ranked condition was for Social and Cultural less than a quarter with the motivation “to continue a
Norms, ranked 30th of 51 GEM economies. family tradition”.
The share of new entrepreneurs with customers
outside the country fell in the early days of the
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review pandemic, but had recovered strongly to almost a
fifth in 2022. More than a half of new entrepreneurs
Almost half of Iranian adults reported that the expected to use more digital technology in the next
pandemic had reduced their household income in six months to sell their products, while a third of those
2022. Perhaps because of this, or because of the lack new entrepreneurs expected to employ another six or
of entrepreneurial finance options elsewhere, while more people in five years’ time.

Institution Type of institution Team members Funders


University Prof. Nezameddin Faghih
Lead institution Iran Labour and Social Security
Prof. Ali Rezaeian
Website Institute (LSSI)
Faculty of Entrepreneurship, Dr. Mohammad Reza Zali
University of Tehran http://ent.ut.ac.ir/en
Dr. Jahangir Yadollahi Farsi
APS vendor
Dr. Seyed Mostafa Razavi
Team
Dr. Rahim Sarhangi Faculty of Entrepreneurship
Team leader Leyla Sarfaraz
Prof. Faghih Contact

[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 149


ECONOMY PROFILE

Israel
Q Population (2021): 9.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 43.7 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
59.2 17
business
To make a difference in the world 33.4 37
Good opportunities to start a business in my
46.8 35=
area To build great wealth or very high income 77.7 10
It is easy to start a business 12.9 49 To continue a family tradition 16.5 45
Personally have the skills and knowledge 35.4 48 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 50.9 38
Fear of failure (opportunity) 44.0 26
Entrepreneurial intentions* 12.3 35
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.7 32 7.0 10.5
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 3.5 41 3.6 3.3
1.7 30= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 19.5 12 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 55.2 47 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 47.6 49 Pandemic has led household income to
36.3 30
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 42.7 1
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 38.5 31
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
48.5 27
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 49.9 20

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Israel
I. Social and 4.9 (15/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.2 (7/22)
2.5 (22/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
3.6 (22/22) 6
6.3 (3/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
6.9 (1/22) 6.6 (2/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.5 (16/22) 6.5 (4/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.8 (22/22) 7.6 (1/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
6.6 (2/22) 6.0 (3/22) recorded in brackets

150 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Israel’s economy continued to grow at about 7% School and for Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation,
between 2021 and 2022 but is expected to slow and last for Physical Infrastructure and for Social and
down slightly in 2023. Private spending, which Cultural Norms. Just a year earlier, Israel had ranked
accounts for more than half of economic activity in first among 50 GEM economies for Social and Cultural
Israel, declined in Q3 2022 by 2%, after a 9% gain the Norms and lowest among 19 Level A economies for
prior three months. Rising prices have had limited Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation.
impact on entrepreneurship, because new digitally
based ventures have been able to compensate for
increases in the cost of living. In 2022, the government 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
introduced new policy changes to support The percentage of adults reporting that the pandemic
entrepreneurship, particularly for minorities. had reduced their household income in 2022 fell to
36%, having been 43% a year earlier. Meanwhile, the
percentage of adults intending to start a business
2022 Framework Conditions Review
in the next three years had fallen throughout the
The evolution of Israel’s quality of entrepreneurial pandemic period, and in 2022 was 12%, less than half of
environment is both complex and contradictory. In 2019, its level in 2019 (30%).
Israel had an entrepreneurial environment assessed Most Israelis are familiar with the notion of
as well sufficient, with an National Entrepreneurship entrepreneurship, although the proportion knowing
Context Index (NECI) score of 5.3, placing it 11th among someone who had recently started a business has
GEM economies. At the onset of the pandemic, that fallen slightly. More than a third of adults considered
assessment fell to 4.8, less than sufficient and 22nd themselves to have the skills and experience to be able
among GEM economies. In 2021, Israel’s NECI score to start their own business, and the proportion seeing
increased to 4.9, with a ranking of 18th, and in 2022 good local opportunities to do so, having fallen at the
increased to a well-sufficient 5.5 and a rank of 12th out onset of the pandemic (from 46% in 2019 to 25% in
of 51 GEM economies. So, on the surface, there was a fall 2020), bounced back to pre-pandemic levels in 2022.
at the start of the pandemic and a good recovery since. Meanwhile, the percentage of adults actually
But delve a little deeper and contradictions begin starting a new business has drifted downwards since
to appear. Start with the assessment of Israel’s 2019 when it was 12.7%, reaching 8.7% in 2022. Male
recovery from the pandemic. This score came in at and female entrepreneurship have moved in parallel:
a much less than sufficient 4.0, third lowest of the in 2022 there were three men starting a new business
51 GEM economies in 2022. Then consider individual for every two women doing the same, just as there was
framework scores in 2022 compared to 2021. In 2021, in 2019. Over the same period, the level of EBO has also
Israel had nine conditions scored as insufficient (<5.0) drifted downwards, but from an already low base. In
and four as sufficient. By 2022 this had become five 2019 5.5% of Israeli adults were running an established
insufficient and eight sufficient. But this wasn’t simply business — by 2022 this had fallen to 3.5%. So while
an improvement in four conditions: between 2021 and the level of new entrepreneurship in Israel looks
2022, 12 of Israel’s 13 framework conditions changed reasonable, few of these new businesses are sustained
status: eight from insufficient to sufficient, and four into established ones.
from sufficient to insufficient. To build great wealth or very high income was
Many of these changes were very dramatic. If a the most agreed motivation among Israel’s new
score of 4.0 is poor, and 6.0 is good, in the space of entrepreneurs, agreed by at least seven in 10 since
a year four conditions went from poor to good: both this question was introduced by GEM. Three in 10 new
government policy conditions, plus Entrepreneurial entrepreneurs had customers beyond Israel in 2022,
Education at School and Ease of Entry: Burdens and down from four in 10 a year earlier. Around half of those
Regulation. At the same time two scores went from entrepreneurs expected, in the next six months, to use
good to poor: Physical Infrastructure ,and Social and more digital technology to sell their products, and one
Cultural Norms. Of the 51 GEM economies in 2022, in five expected to employ another six or more people
Israel was ranked first for Entrepreneurial Education at in the next three years.

Institution Website Prof. Eli Gimmon, PhD APS vendor


https://in.bgu.ac.il/en Michal Ben David, MSc
Lead institution Brandman Institute
Other institutions involved
Ira Center of Business, Technology &
Ministry of Economics and Industry, Funders
Society, Ben Gurion Universit of the Contact
Negev Government of Israel
The Ira Foundation for Business
Technology and Society [email protected]
Team Ben Gurion University of the Negev [email protected]
M51 Corporation [email protected]
Team leader
The Ministry of the Economy and [email protected]
Prof. Emeritus Ehud Menipaz, PhD
Industry
Type of institution Team members Government of Israel
University Yoash Avrahami, MSc

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 151


ECONOMY PROFILE

Italy
Q Population (2021): 59.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 45.9 thousand (World Bank)

Italy did not participate in the


2022 Adult Population Survey.

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Italy
I. Social and 4.3 (20/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 3.9 (21/22)
4.4 (15/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.1 (21/22) 6
4.2 (18/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.9 (22/22) 3.6 (21/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.9 (14/22) 4.1 (20/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.0 (21/22) 2.8 (16/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.9 (20/22) 4.3 (20/22) recorded in brackets

152 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
GDP growth in Italy in 2022 was expected to be but serious enough at a time when most economies
around 3%, with inflation at 8%. Unemployment was were investing to improve their environment for
back below pre-pandemic levels, but still relatively entrepreneurship.
high at 8%. Rising prices and uncertainty over the All but one Framework Condition in Italy scored
macroeconomic environment were both adversely lower in 2022 than in 2021, with the largest falls
affecting entrepreneurial activities. for Research and Development Transfers, Physical
Infrastructure, Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation
and Government Policy: Support and Relevance. Only
2022 Framework Conditions Review two Framework Conditions were rated as sufficient
Italy was among the countries hit hardest and earliest (≥5.0) in 2022, and both by a fine margin. Much of the
by the pandemic. National expert assessments rated responsibility for these worsening conditions rests with
Italy’s COVID recovery at 5.7: more than sufficient, the government, who must therefore take ownership
but middle ranking among the 51 GEM participating for restoring that entrepreneurial environment. A good
economies in 2022. place to start would be entrepreneurial education,
This score for COVID recovery turns out to be higher in both schools and colleges, although attention is
than any Entrepreneurial Framework Condition that needed for most conditions across the board.
Italy achieved in 2022. Those scores deteriorated
sharply in 2022, pushing Italy’s overall National
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) score down to 4.2
from 4.7, placing Italy 37th when it had been 24th just Italy did not participate in the 2022 GEM Adult
a year earlier. This deterioration was not quite on the Population Survey.
scale of Italy’s Mediterranean near-neighbour Spain,

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Fondazione Aristide Merloni IPSOS


Centre for Innovation and Prof. Donato Iacobucci, PhD Università Politecnica delle Marche
Entrepreneurship, Università Contact
Politecnica delle Marche Team members
Associate Prof. Diego D’Adda, PhD [email protected]
Associate Prof. Alessandra Micozzi,
PhD
Francesca Micozzi, PhD
Type of institution Martina Orci
University

Website
https://www.univpm.it

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 153


ECONOMY PROFILE

Japan
Q Population (2021): 125.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.9 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
20.4 49
business
To make a difference in the world 31.9 39
Good opportunities to start a business in my
12.7 49
area To build great wealth or very high income 41.1 43
It is easy to start a business 27.5 44 To continue a family tradition 26.5 30
Personally have the skills and knowledge 14.9 49 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 37.1 45
Fear of failure (opportunity) 50.9 10=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 5.1 48
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.4 43 3.6 9.1
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.3 26 4.1 8.6
1.1 43= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 6.7 31 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 64.6 43 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 55.6 45= Pandemic has led household income to
25.8 43
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 41.7 2
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 26.8 43
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
54.4 22
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 28.2 42

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Japan
I. Social and 4.5 (18/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.8 (12/22)
3.8 (20/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.4 (7/22) 6
5.6 (6/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.9 (11/22) 4.5 (19/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.1 (4/22) 4.6 (18/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.1 (20/22) 2.5 (20/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (7/22) 5.0 (13/22) recorded in brackets

154 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Slow but stable and balanced growth was expected 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
in Japan in 2022. Inflation was also low, at around 2%,
Japan has certainly not escaped the impacts of
with little impact on entrepreneurship.
COVID-19, with one in four adults reporting that their
The Japanese government is planning a system
household income was lower in 2022 due to the
that would require private financial institutions not
pandemic, down a little on a year earlier. Very few
to demand collateral or guarantors when they extend
Japanese invest in a new business started by someone
loans to newly established companies.
else, and not many more intend to start a business in
the next few years, although that proportion has been
2022 Framework Conditions Review slowly rising.
The percentage of adults starting or running a new
The overall quality of the Japanese environment for business in Japan remains relatively low, even for a
entrepreneurship was assessed by its own national high-income economy, but has been fairly stable since
experts as just sufficient in 2022, with a National the onset of the pandemic, slowly climbing to 6.4% in
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) score of 5.0, 2022. EBO has been less stable, rising then falling as
ranking it 22nd among 51 GEM economies. A year the pandemic took hold, then rising again to match
earlier it had been scored at 4.7, less than sufficient TEA in 2022. Throughout the period, men have been
(<5.0), but ranked at 21st. So that overall environment around twice as likely as women to be starting a new
had improved, with 10 of 13 individual Framework business.
Conditions scoring higher in 2022 than 2021. These Not surprisingly, low levels of entrepreneurial activity
improvements had been enough to push three mean that just one in five Japanese adults know
conditions from insufficient to sufficient: Government someone who has started a business. An even smaller
Policy: Support and Relevance; Entrepreneurial share consider themselves to have the skills and
Education Post-School; and Commercial and experience to start their own, or see good conditions to
Professional Infrastructure. In 2022, Japan had five start a business locally. For those that do, half would be
conditions rated as sufficient compared to just two a deterred from doing so by fear of failure.
year earlier. Agreement by new entrepreneurs is fairly evenly
However, despite these improvements, it may divided among the four defined motivations, but “to
be surprising that modern, high-income Japan still build great wealth or very high income” just about
has so many Framework Conditions scored so low. leads with two out of five. More than a half of new
While Japan ranked sixth of 51 economies for Ease entrepreneurs expect to use more digital technology
of Entry: Market Dynamics, and eighth for Physical in the next six months to sell their products, and just
Infrastructure, it was also 45th in terms of Social and about one in five expect to employ an additional six
Cultural Norms. It is also surprising that Japan is still people in five years’ time. Finally, the share of new
rated as insufficient in both entrepreneurial finance entrepreneurs with customers beyond Japan has been
conditions and in Government Entrepreneurial increasing slowly, from less than one in five in 2019 to
Programs. This uneven Framework Condition almost one in four in 2022.
performance may help to explain why so few adults
start new businesses.

Institution Website Team Funders


https://www.musashi.ac.jp/english
Lead institution Team leader Ministry of Economy, Trade and
Other institutions involved Industry, METI
Musashi University President Noriyuki Takahashi
Nihon University
Chuo University Team members
APS vendor
Toyo University Prof. Masaaki Suzuki

Keio University Prof. Yuji Honjo Social Survey Research Information


Prof. Takehiko Yasuda Co. Ltd (SSRI)
Prof. Takeo Isobe
Type of institution Contact
University
[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 155


ECONOMY PROFILE

Latvia
Q Population (2021): 1.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.5 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
38.0 42
business
To make a difference in the world 29.3 41
Good opportunities to start a business in my
34.6 44 To build great wealth or very high income
area 40.4 44
It is easy to start a business 29.4 43 To continue a family tradition 22.6 37=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 53.9 30 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 63.9 28
Fear of failure (opportunity) 36.7 42
Entrepreneurial intentions* 17.6 23
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
14.2 16 10.6 17.8
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 12.3 4 8.4 16.3
3.5 16 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 25.2 3 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 70.7 35 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 76.0 27 Pandemic has led household income to
28.4 40
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 28.5 16
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 46.3 21
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
45.6 34
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 35.0 34

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Latvia
I. Social and 5.1 (3/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.6 (4/16)
5.8 (2/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.3 (8/16) 6
4.7 (2/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.5 (1/16) 4.9 (6/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.1 (1/16) 5.5 (3/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.6 (2/16) 5.6 (1/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.0 (2/16) 5.2 (4/16) recorded in brackets

156 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
According to the Bank of Latvia, GDP growth will slow were working hand in hand with the government to
to 3% in 2022 with an unemployment rate around 7% enhance the entrepreneurial environment in Latvia.
and with an annual inflation rate close to a record high
rate of 22%.
Business confidence has dropped sharply and 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
business investment continues to slow due to high The proportion of adults reporting that the pandemic
uncertainty and worsening financial conditions. had reduced their household income in 2022 was just
Many companies had passed on increased costs of over a quarter, still high but an improvement on the
their goods and services, but this cannot be applied one in three reporting decreased incomes two years
indefinitely as the reduction in purchasing power earlier. Over the same period, the percentage of adults
would lead to a reduction in demand. investing in someone else’s business had been stable
The Latvian government has approved the Recovery but low, at around 6% in 2022. However, business
Fund support program, launched in August 2022 and intentions were lower in 2022 (18%) than before the
aiming to increase productivity growth and reduce pandemic (28% in 2019).
energy costs. There has been similar stability in the key
entrepreneurial activity variables. In 2019, 15.4% of
adults in Latvia were starting or running a new
2022 Framework Conditions Review
business. By 2022, this was down slightly at 14.2%.
The assessed quality of the overall entrepreneurial EBO fared similarly: from 12.9% to 12.3% over the
environment in Latvia, as measured by its National same period. Even the entrepreneurial gender gap
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score, has has remained stable, with around five men starting
improved considerably in recent years, despite the or running a new business in Latvia for every three
pandemic. In 2020, Latvia’s overall score was 4.2, women doing the same.
much less than sufficient (<5.0), and ranked 21st The proportion of adults in Latvia knowing someone
among GEM economies. In 2020 that score edged who had recently started their own business declined
into just sufficient, at 5.0, ranked 17th. In 2022, Latvia’s a little at the onset of the pandemic, and has stayed
score increased even more to 5.5, well sufficient, and down since, at about two in five in 2022, having been
ranked 13th among the 51 GEM economies. These almost one in two in 2019. Confidence has remained
improvements were surely influenced by the positive high, with more than a half of Latvian adults agreeing
response to the economic effects of the pandemic with they have the skills and experience to start their own
national experts scoring Latvia at 6.1 (well sufficient) on business in each of the last four years. The proportion
this new question. of adults seeing good opportunities to start a business
Moreover, these improvements were largely locally fell over the pandemic, but not by much, and
across the board, with improvements in 12 of the was more than one in three in 2022. Just one-third of
13 Framework Condition scores in 2022, and only these would be deterred from starting a business by
one score falling: Physical Infrastructure. There are the fear of failure.
clear signs that the government has played a large “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” has
part in these improvements, with both government remained the most agreed motivation among Latvia’s
policy conditions assessed as improved, although still new entrepreneurs, of whom nearly half expect to
not sufficient. However, both education conditions use more digital technology in the next six months to
improved enough to push them into sufficiency. The sell their products. Meanwhile, the proportion of new
improvement in Entrepreneurial Education at School entrepreneurs with strong job expectations (expecting
was both substantial and rare: Latvia was fourth on this to employ another six or more people in five years’
condition among GEM economies in 2022. Both ease time) was high, at around one in four, but lower than
of entry conditions also improved, suggesting markets the one in three pre-pandemic (in 2019).

Institution Type of institution Team APS vendor


Business School
Lead institution Team leader SKDS
Website
Stockholm School of Economics in Marija Krumina, MSc, PhD candidate
Riga (SSE Riga) https://www.sseriga.edu
Team members
Contact
Other institutions involved
Anders Paalzow, PhD [email protected]
Baltic International Centre for
Economic Policy Studies (BICEPS)
Funders

Stockholm School of Economics in


Riga

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 157


ECONOMY PROFILE

Lithuania
Q Population (2021): 2.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.7 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
53.1 26
business
To make a difference in the world 40.8 31=
Good opportunities to start a business in my
40.4 40
area To build great wealth or very high income 46.5 37
It is easy to start a business 36.5 36= To continue a family tradition 24.0 33=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 49.8 36= To earn a living because jobs are scarce 66.6 25
Fear of failure (opportunity) 46.2 19
Entrepreneurial intentions* 15.1 29
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
12.7 20 9.0 16.6
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 8.3 15= 5.7 10.9
3.2 18 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 18.5 15 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 71.4 31= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 76.3 25= Pandemic has led household income to
29.1 38=
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 20.0 24
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 50.2 16
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
28.8 47
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 29.2 41

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Lithuania
I. Social and 5.7 (7/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.6 (5/22)
6.4 (5/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.7 (3/22) 6
5.6 (7/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.5 (6/22) 5.9 (6/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.5 (7/22) 6.0 (8/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.4 (4/22) 4.8 (5/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.3 (6/22) 5.4 (10/22) recorded in brackets

158 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Despite the war in Ukraine and energy price shocks, 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
the Lithuanian economy grew by around 2% in 2022,
In 2022, three in 10 adults in Lithuania reported that
with exports up about 3%. High energy and commodity
the pandemic had reduced their household income,
prices were driving inflation upwards. Lithuania’s
a relatively modest level, similar to in Latvia next door,
fastest-growing sectors in 2022 were manufacturing,
and ninth lowest of Level A economies. Just 6% of
arts and entertainment, and professional and scientific
adults invested in someone else’s new business in
services.
2022, a relatively low figure no doubt aided by the
Economic uncertainty has reduced investment,
availability of entrepreneurial finance elsewhere.
and the cost of borrowing has increased, including for
Less than one in five of Lithuania’s adults intended to
the Lithuanian government. However, the risk of an
start a business in the next three years, while around a
economic downturn may reduce the business need to
half knew someone who had started their own business
borrow further.
recently. A similar proportion regarded themselves
as having the skills and experience to start their own
2022 Framework Conditions Review business, while two in five saw good opportunities to
start a business locally in 2022, although nearly a half of
In 2022, the overall entrepreneurial environment these would be deterred by fear of failure.
of Lithuania was assessed by its national experts The proportion of adults starting or running a new
as having deteriorated since 2021, with its National business in Lithuania was 12.7%, while EBO was 8.3%
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of adults, a sustainable ratio of three new to every two
declining from 6.1 to 5.8, although its ranking among Established Business Owners. In Lithuania, men were
the 51 GEM economies only fell from fifth to sixth. almost twice as likely as women to be starting a new
This decline was despite those national experts having business, suggesting that many women are missing
rated Lithuania’s response to the economic effects of out on the autonomy and income opportunities that
the pandemic as excellent, scoring highest of all those go with owning your own business.
economies. “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” was the
In terms of individual Framework Conditions, 10 motivation with the highest level of agreement (two
of the 13 had lower scores in 2022 than in 2021, with out of three) among new entrepreneurs, although
the largest falls being for Ease of Entry: Burdens and “to build great wealth or very high income” was also
Regulation and for Physical Infrastructure, which agreed by about a half.
was still Lithuania’s highest-rated condition. Most of Lithuania is a small economy, and it is not surprising
the other changes were modest. Despite these falls, that two in five new entrepreneurs had customers
Lithuania still had 10 framework conditions ranked beyond its borders. This proportion may increase,
in the top 10 of the 51 economies in 2022. As in 2021, because nearly three out of five new entrepreneurs
just one condition was rated as insufficient (<5.0): expected, in the next six months, to use more
Entrepreneurial Education at School, which did edge a digital technology to sell their products, offering
little closer to sufficiency. Many economies with much the potential of a wider customer base. Finally, job
higher incomes would welcome such a supportive creation expectations were good, with a quarter of
entrepreneurial environment. those starting or running a new business in Lithuania
anticipating employing another six or more people in
five years’ time.

Institution Other institutions involved Team Funders


Enterprise Lithuania
Lead institution Team leader Moody’s Lithuania
Vilnius University Business School Prof. Dr. Saule Maciukaite-Zviniene Enterprise Lithuania
Vilnius University Business School
Team members
Vytenis Mockus
Ieva Buziene, PhD
APS vendor
Natalya Lahotska, PhD RAIT
Type of institution
Aneta Slekyte Kaminiene
University
Assoc. Prof. Vytautas Kuostis, PhD
Contact
Website Jone Kalendiene
https://www.vm.vu.lt/en/ Jurgita Piesliakaite, PhD [email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 159


ECONOMY PROFILE

Luxembourg
Q Population (2021): 0.6 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 134.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
41.3 39=
business
To make a difference in the world 55.8 15
Good opportunities to start a business in my
52.4 29=
area To build great wealth or very high income 48.3 34
It is easy to start a business 64.2 15 To continue a family tradition 37.6 12
Personally have the skills and knowledge 50.0 35 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 47.0 41
Fear of failure (opportunity) 44.1 25
Entrepreneurial intentions* 14.0 31
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
7.0 39 5.4 8.5
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.3 33 3.5 6.6
2.7 21= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 29.4 2 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 85.3 13 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 82.4 20 Pandemic has led household income to
27.5 41
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 40.3 3
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 49.7 18
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
55.0 20
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 50.7 17

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Luxembourg
I. Social and 4.4 (19/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.6 (16/22)
5.4 (11/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.9 (18/22) 6
5.2 (12/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.8 (14/22) 5.2 (12/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.7 (20/22) 5.7 (14/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.6 (15/22) 4.2 (10/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (8/22) 5.5 (8/22) recorded in brackets

160 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In 2022, GDP in Luxembourg was expected to increase 2021 — and then recovered in 2022 back to 8%. The
by 1.7%. while inflation was running at almost 7%, the proportion of adults intending to start their own
highest level since 1983. Meanwhile, to help businesses, business in the next three years followed a similar
the government introduced a €500 million package pattern: some fall at the onset of the pandemic and
of business loan guarantees and reduced VAT by one recovery since then. The 2022 level, well under one in
percentage point. five, is almost back to the 2019 pre-pandemic level.
The percentage of adults starting or running a
new business in Luxembourg fell in the early days of
2022 Framework Conditions Review the pandemic (from 10% in 2019 to 8% in 2020), and
A small economy with the highest GDP per capita has continued to decline slowly since, reaching 7% in
in the entire 2022 GEM National Expert Survey (NES) 2022. Female entrepreneurship fell faster than male
of 51 economies, Luxembourg ought to have an entrepreneurship in those early days, but has since
entrepreneurial environment to match its resources. recovered slightly, so that the relative gender gap in
That environment was assessed in 2022 by its own 2022 was little more than in 2019. EBO also declined
national experts as only just sufficient, with a National and then recovered. By 2022, the level (5.3%) was a
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) score of 5.0, a little higher than in 2019 (4.7%). In 2019, Luxembourg
marginal improvement on the previous year’s score of had two adults starting a new business for every adult
4.9 (just insufficient). This score ranked Luxembourg running an established business. By 2022 this ratio had
20th among the GEM economies. In 2020 it had scored fallen closer to three to two.
5.2 and ranked 13th. The pandemic can’t easily be Two out of five adults in Luxembourg know
blamed for this change, since national experts also someone who has recently started a business. Just over
scored Luxembourg at well above sufficient in terms of half of adults agree they have the skills and experience
recovery from the economic effects of COVID-19. to run their own business, with a similar proportion
In 2022, Luxembourg had seven Framework seeing good opportunities to start a business locally,
Conditions assessed as sufficient (≥5.0) and six as though about half of these would be deterred by fear
insufficient. Sufficient conditions included government of failure.
policies and programs, the Physical Infrastructure, and Since GEM introduced questions about the
Social and Cultural Norms. Insufficient conditions were motivations of new entrepreneurs in 2019, a majority
Entrepreneurial Finance and the two ease of entry of those starting or running a new business in
conditions. So the sufficient conditions were largely Luxembourg have agreed with the motive “to make a
government-led, while the insufficient conditions difference in the world”. In 2022, “To build great wealth
were largely market-driven. The insufficiency of or very high income” or “to earn a living because jobs
entrepreneurial finance is perhaps most surprising in a are scarce” follow closely behind.
rich economy with high-quality institutions. Luxembourg is a small country, and it is not
Luxembourg’s two lowest-scoring conditions in 2021 surprising that a majority of its new entrepreneurs
— Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics and Entrepreneurial have customers outside the country. The pandemic
Education at School — both improved their scores may have encouraged new entrepreneurs in
markedly by 2022, but still didn’t surpass the other Luxembourg to look outwards, because, in 2022, 58%
conditions. of those new entrepreneurs had customers outside
of the country, compared to a pre-pandemic level
of 54% in 2019. In addition, more than a half of new
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review entrepreneurs expect, in the next six months, to
use more digital technology to sell their products.
Luxembourg is a high-income, high-investment Job expectations are strong, with four in 10 new
economy, but the percentage of its adults investing entrepreneurs expecting to employ another six or
in someone else’s new business declined in the early more people in five years’ time, up from three in 10
years of the pandemic — from 8% in 2019 to 6% in pre-pandemic in 2019.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader STATEC Research TNS ILRES


STATEC Research Francesco Sarracino STATEC (National Institute of Statistics
and Economic Studies of the Grand
Team members
Contact
Duchy of Luxembourg)
Chiara Peroni Chambre de Commerce Luxembourg [email protected]
Maxime Pettinger House of Entrepreneurship
Ministère de l’Économie
Type of institution
Public Body

Website
https://statistiques.public.lu/en/
statistique-publique/statec/red.html

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 161


ECONOMY PROFILE

Mexico
Q Population (2021): 130.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 20.0 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
47.7 32
business
To make a difference in the world 68.2 9
Good opportunities to start a business in my
56.4 25
area To build great wealth or very high income 51.4 30
It is easy to start a business 46.3 29 To continue a family tradition 53.1 3
Personally have the skills and knowledge 67.1 15 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 86.9 5
Fear of failure (opportunity) 45.5 20
Entrepreneurial intentions* 17.5 24
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
12.9 18= 12.1 13.8
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 1.6 49 1.0 2.2
3.1 19= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 4.3 38 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 85.2 14 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 87.5 9 Pandemic has led household income to
77.5 3
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 5.3 44
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 48.5 20
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
78.9 4
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 54.9 12

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Mexico
I. Social and 3.5 (13/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.0 (8/16)
4.4 (7/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.8 (12/16) 6
2.3 (15/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.3 (16/16) 2.9 (14/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.7 (7/16) 3.8 (12/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.4 (15/16) 1.7 (6/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.8 (15/16) 5.3 (3/16) recorded in brackets

162 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Inflation has been rising in Mexico, reaching nearly 9% year was Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics, thus
in September 2022, its highest level in more than 20 suggesting buoyant local markets. In the absence of
years. GDP looks likely to have grown by 2% in 2022. government support, the best survival strategy for new
High inflation is modifying household consumption businesses may be to focus on those local markets.
patterns, while increases in interest rates have moved
resources from productive to speculative assets.
Credit is expensive in Mexico, and a major hurdle to 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
entrepreneurship. Mexico last participated in the GEM Adult Population
Federal government programs supporting Survey (APS) in 2019, so comparisons can only be made
entrepreneurship initiatives have visibly decreased between then and 2022. There is no doubt that the
over the last three years. However, some local state pandemic hit Mexico hard, with three out of four adults
governments, like Jalisco, Querétaro, Yucatán and reporting that it reduced household income in 2022.
Nuevo León, have developed regional support If business intentions had been affected by the
programs to improve the local entrepreneurship and pandemic, by 2022 they had almost recovered, with,
innovation ecosystems and, in some cases, provided in 2022, just under one in five adults intending to start
early-stage funding. a business in the next three years, compared to one
in four in 2019. As in 2019, almost one half of adults
in Mexico knew someone who had recently started
2022 Framework Conditions Review
their own business, and more than two-thirds of
The quality of the Mexican entrepreneurial adults considered themselves to have the skills and
environment, as assessed by its own national experience to do so themselves. The proportion of
experts and as measured by its overall National adults seeing good opportunities to start a business
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score, locally in 2022 was more than one in two (56%), slightly
deteriorated significantly in 2022. In 2021, the overall down from the 2019 level (63%). Almost half of those
NECI score was 4.3, 30th among GEM economies. seeing good opportunities to start a business would be
By 2022 this had fallen to 3.8 and 44th. Nor was this deterred from doing so by the fear of failure.
reduction confined to a few conditions. Twelve of The percentage of adults in Mexico starting or
the 13 Framework Conditions scored lower in 2022 running their own business was virtually the same in
than in 2021. If a Framework Condition score of ≥5.0 is 2022 as in 2019 (13%), while the proportion of adults
regarded as sufficient, <4.0 as poor and <3.0 as very running an established business fell slightly from an
poor, between 2021 and 2022 two conditions went already low 1.8% to 1.6%. The lack of new businesses
from sufficient to insufficient, two became poor being sustained into established ones reflects the lack
and three went from poor to very poor, the latter of resources and support provided by the Mexican
including both government policy conditions plus entrepreneurial environment.
Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation. All three are Four in five of new entrepreneurs agreed with the
the direct responsibility of the government. At the motivation “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”,
same time, Entrepreneurial Education at School, also a although more than two out of three also agreed with
responsibility of the government, went from an already the motivation “to make a difference in the world”, and
low score of 2.2 to 1.7, or from bad to worse. In 2022, more than a half with “to continue a family tradition”.
only Togo scored lower than Mexico for Entrepreneurial The proportion of those starting or running a new
Education at School. Quite a lot to learn. business with customers beyond Mexico was around
It is difficult to attribute this deterioration to the one 10 in 2022, as it had been in 2019. Four out of five
pandemic, given that the same national experts scored of those new entrepreneurs expected to use more
Mexico’s recovery from the economic impacts of the digital technology to sell their products in the next six
pandemic at 5.1. This is sufficient, but not outstanding. months. Just over one in four anticipated employing
The only condition scoring higher than the previous another six or more people in five years’ time.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Instituto de Emprendimiento Berumen y Asociados S.A. de C.V.
Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios José Ernesto Amorós, PhD Eugenio Garza Lagüera (Tecnológico
Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) de Monterrey)
José Manuel Aguirre, MSc Contact
Team members [email protected]
Elvira Naranjo, PhD
Patricia Alonso, PhD
Type of institution Lucía Rodríguez, PhD
University Marcia Villasana, PhD
Margarita Herrera, PhD
Website
https://tec.mx/en

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 163


ECONOMY PROFILE

Morocco
Q Population (2021): 37.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 8.1 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
51.6 28
business
To make a difference in the world 13.5 48
Good opportunities to start a business in my
62.5 17
area To build great wealth or very high income 61.2 20
It is easy to start a business 36.5 36= To continue a family tradition 19.5 42
Personally have the skills and knowledge 63.3 21 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 82.5 10
Fear of failure (opportunity) 44.4 23
Entrepreneurial intentions* 37.3 11
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
4.2 48 3.1 5.4
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 4.1 37= 1.5 6.8
1.2 40= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 4.0 39 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 58.9 46 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 55.6 45= Pandemic has led household income to
66.3 11
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 11.8 36
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 33.6 35
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
63.4 10
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 32.1 39

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Morocco
I. Social and 4.2 (5/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 4.1 (5/13)
4.4 (11/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.4 (5/13) 6
5.2 (4/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.2 (12/13) 4.8 (4/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.5 (10/13) 4.3 (6/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.2 (4/13) 2.0 (9/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.9 (7/13) 4.3 (8/13) recorded in brackets

164 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
With 8% growth in 2021, the Moroccan economy economies, Morocco ranked 50th for this Framework
rebounded from the losses of the first year of the Condition, its lowest rank by some margin.
pandemic. A series of overlapping shocks, including yet
another drought (the third in the last four years), and
higher prices for imported energy reduced that growth 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
to just 0.3% in Q1 2022. Around two out of three adults in Morocco in 2022
Inflation had increased to 8% by August 2022. The reported that the pandemic had reduced their
government has introduced measures to mitigate household income, which was roughly average for a
its impacts on households and specific sectors, Level C economy.
substantially increasing pre-existing subsidies. Business intentions had risen initially at the onset
New initiatives include FORSA (opportunity in of the pandemic, but have fallen steadily since then,
Arabic), combining support and funding with regional reaching 37% in 2022, down from 48% in 2020. The
and gender equity. The government was exploring percentage of adults actually starting or running a
ways to unlock the potential of the private sector, new business has fallen precipitously through the
including reform of Morocco’s large state-owned pandemic years, from over 11% in 2019 to little more
enterprise system and a review of the investment than 4% in 2022. The level of EBO has also fallen, but
charter. not as steeply, from almost 8% in 2019 to just over 4% in
2022. In the year before the pandemic, new start levels
had been half as much again as EBO, but by 2022 they
2022 Framework Conditions Review
were both at virtually the same low level.
In the pandemic period, Morocco has been making Despite these low levels of entrepreneurial activity,
substantial efforts to improve its entrepreneurial around half of Moroccan adults knew someone who
environment and there are some indications that had recently started their own business, while more
those efforts are paying off. In 2020, Morocco’s national than three in five agreed they had the skills and
expert assessments had resulted in an overall National experience to be able to do the same, or saw good
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of 3.8, opportunities to be able to do so locally, although, once
ranking Morocco 39th of 44 economies. By 2021, this again, around half of these would be deterred by fear
score had improved to 3.9, but an increased number of of failure.
economies, and improving environments elsewhere, Earning a living because jobs are scarce has
meant that Morocco ranked 41st of 50 economies. In been the dominant agreed motivation among new
2022, however, improvements across the board meant entrepreneurs in Morocco since this question was
that Morocco’s NECI score was 4.3, placing it 35th out introduced by GEM in 2019, agreed by four out of five
of 51 economies. in 2022. Both making a difference in the world and
In the period 2021 to 2022, Morocco improved in all continuing a family tradition received relatively little
of its Framework Condition scores except one: Ease of agreement in Morocco.
Entry: Burdens and Regulation (the score stayed the Nearly two in three new entrepreneurs expected to
same). Of the 12 condition scores that improved, the use more digital technology in the next six months to
biggest increases were for the level of Entrepreneurial sell their products, and more than a quarter expected
Finance and for Entrepreneurial Education at School, to employ another six or more people in five years’
each important for future entrepreneurial success. time. Relatively few of these new entrepreneurs
These are excellent achievements for a Level C had customers outside of Morocco, although that
economy, although Ease of Entry: Burdens and percentage has been increasing recently (from 6% in
Regulation with its unchanged score was perhaps the 2019 to 10% in 2022).
condition most in need of improving. Among the 51

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


University
Lead institution Team leader University of Hassan II Casablanca
Website
Entrepreneurship Research Khalid El Ouazzani, PhD
Laboratory, Faculty of Law, Economics http://www.entrepreneurship.
univcasa.ma
Fatima Boutaleb APS vendor
and Social Sciences
University of Hassan II Casablanca Team members ClaireVision
Abdellatif Komat
Salah Koubaa
Contact
Hind Malainine
Sara Yassine [email protected]
Thomas Schott [email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 165


ECONOMY PROFILE

Netherlands
Q Population (2021): 17.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 63.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
54.5 23
business
To make a difference in the world 46.8 27
Good opportunities to start a business in my
61.6 19
area To build great wealth or very high income 45.8 40
It is easy to start a business 82.9 2 To continue a family tradition 24.6 32
Personally have the skills and knowledge 42.2 44 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 39.4 44
Fear of failure (opportunity) 33.8 44
Entrepreneurial intentions* 16.2 25
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
12.5 21 9.6 15.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.8 22= 5.3 8.3
2.5 23= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 22.4 7 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 67.8 40 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 66.1 41 Pandemic has led household income to
23.6 45
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 30.8 14
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 32.6 37
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
38.5 37
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 48.1 22

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Netherlands
I. Social and 6.3 (4/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.8 (2/22)
6.2 (6/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.0 (11/22) 6
5.5 (9/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
6.4 (3/22) 6.0 (5/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.3 (11/22) 6.0 (9/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.2 (8/22) 5.1 (4/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.5 (5/22) 5.9 (4/22) recorded in brackets

166 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The economy of the Netherlands grew strongly in 2022, of EBO had fallen sharply (from 10.8% in 2019 to 7%
with GDP predicted to have increased by almost 5% in 2020), but has been fairly stable since then (6.8%
over the year. Increasing energy prices pushed inflation in 2022). Less than a quarter of adults reported a fall
above 11%. in household income in 2022 due to the pandemic,
a relatively low level even among Level A economies.
Informal investment actually increased during the
2022 Framework Conditions Review pandemic, from 4% of adults investing in someone
The Netherlands has long had a high-quality else’s new business in 2019 to 9% in 2020, a level
environment for entrepreneurship, and that continued retained since then.
in 2022 with the Netherlands being just one of three In 2022 more than half of Dutch adults knew a new
economies scored as sufficient (≥5.0) in all Framework entrepreneur, and even more saw good opportunities
Conditions, alongside the United Arab Emirates and to start a business locally. While confidence in their
India. However, it saw falls in 12 of the 13 Framework own skills and experience was relatively low, the
Condition scores compared to 2021. Hence the fall proportion of those who see good opportunities but
in the National Entrepreneurship Context Index would be deterred by fear of failure was even lower.
(NECI) score for the overall quality of the Dutch Perhaps surprisingly, the level of male
entrepreneurial environment from 6.3 in 2021 to 5.9 entrepreneurship in the Netherlands has remained
in 2022. As a result, the Netherlands dropped from higher than that of females. In 2022, three men started
second in the NECI league table to fifth, now closely a new business for every two women doing the same.
followed by Switzerland, Indonesia and Lithuania. Pre-pandemic, the entrepreneurial gender gap was
The largest falls in Framework Condition scores were much smaller — since then, male TEA has increased
for Physical Infrastructure, Government Policy: Taxes faster than female TEA. Less surprisingly for a small
and Bureaucracy and for Entrepreneurial Education at country, more than a third of new entrepreneurs
School. Framework scores for the Netherlands remain reported having customers from abroad, although only
well above the average for Level A economies, except two in five of those starting or running a new business
for Government Policy: Support and Relevance. These expected to use more digital technology to sell their
scores put the Netherlands in the top 15 when ranked products in the next six months, maybe because levels
by individual framework scores, apart from Ease of were already high.
Entry: Market Dynamics, where the score ranked 26th. Business intentions have risen during the pandemic
years, with nearly one in five adults in the Netherlands
intending to start a business in the next three years,
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review up from just one in eight in 2019. No single motivation
dominated, with “to make a difference in the world”,
For a high-income economy, the Netherlands “to build great wealth or very high income” and “to
continues to have relatively strong levels of earn a living because jobs are scarce” each agreed by
entrepreneurial activity, with TEA at 12.5% in 2022, around two in five new entrepreneurs. Less than one in
which, although slightly down from the previous year four agreed they had started a business “to continue a
(14.2%), was still above the pre-pandemic level of 10.4% family tradition”.
in 2019. In the early stages of the pandemic, the level

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader The Ministry of Economic Affairs and GDCC and PanelClix
Panteia Jacqueline Snijders Climate Policy of the Netherlands

Team members
Contact
Paul van der Zeijden [email protected]
Dr Jan de Kok, Phd
Martin Clarke
Type of institution
Pim Zijlstra
Research Institute

Website
https://www.panteia.com

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 167


ECONOMY PROFILE

Norway
Q Population (2021): 5.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 79.2 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
42.6 38
business
To make a difference in the world 48.0 24
Good opportunities to start a business in my
73.6 8
area To build great wealth or very high income 46.1 39
It is easy to start a business 82.8 3 To continue a family tradition 22.9 35
Personally have the skills and knowledge 49.2 39 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 30.4 47
Fear of failure (opportunity) 41.0 35=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 5.5 46
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.5 42 4.5 8.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.6 31= 3.5 7.6
1.5 35 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 11.0 25 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 48.5 49 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 61.8 43 Pandemic has led household income to
8.6 49
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 38.7 4
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 39.1 30
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
47.7 28
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 36.0 33

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Norway
I. Social and 4.6 (17/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.3 (18/22)
5.5 (9/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.4 (9/22) 6
4.3 (16/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.2 (8/22) 5.4 (10/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.6 (22/22) 5.9 (10/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.4 (3/22) 4.5 (8/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.6 (13/22) 5.5 (9/22) recorded in brackets

168 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In 2022, economic activity in Norway was constrained 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
by labour shortages, with unemployment running
Less than one in 10 adults in Norway reported that
at less than 2%. Consumption was expected to fall as
their household income had been reduced by the
household purchasing power declines due to inflation
pandemic in 2022, lowest of all the GEM economies by
and rising interest rates.
some margin, as it has been since this question was
Some targeted COVID-19-related support for
first asked in the GEM Adult Population Survey (APS)
businesses continued in 2022.
in 2020. Despite this, the percentage of Norwegian
adults starting or running a new business had more
2022 Framework Conditions Review than halved in the early stages of the pandemic, from
8% in 2019 to 3% in 2021, but then more than doubled
Norway was rated very highly by its national experts in 2022 (to 7%). This volatility was reflected in both
in terms of the quality of its economic recovery from male and female entrepreneurship, with the relative
the impacts of COVID-19, scoring 6.9 and being gender gap of two male entrepreneurs to each female
ranked third out of these economies. In terms of entrepreneur being more or less maintained over
entrepreneurial actions in support of the United this period. The level of EBO has been more stable,
Nations Sustainable Development Goals, Norway although this also declined in the first two years of the
scored slightly lower but was ranked first. pandemic, before recovering in 2022 to a level (6%) that
However, and as with Sweden next door, Norway matched that of 2019.
experienced a sharp decline in the quality of its Just over 5% of Norwegian adults had invested in
entrepreneurial framework in the period 2021–2022. someone else’s new business in 2022, while 6% of
Scores for 11 of 13 Framework Conditions declined, adults intend to start a business in the next three years,
with the largest falls for Government Policy: Taxes and both proportions changing little over the pandemic
Bureaucracy; Entrepreneurial Education at School; cycle, and both relatively low, even for a high-income
and Research and Development Transfers. It is not a European economy.
coincidence that the government has a substantial As in its Swedish neighbour, half of Norwegian
influence on each of these, as well as on Government adults considered themselves as having the skills and
Policy: Support and Relevance and Government experience to start their own business, slightly more
Entrepreneurial Programs, scores for each of which than those who knew someone who has started a
also fell, albeit not as far. As with Sweden, resources business recently. Again like Sweden, three out of four
should be an issue, with Norway ranked third of the Norwegian adults saw good opportunities to start
51 GEM National Expert Survey (NES) participating a business locally, although just under half of these
economies in 2022 in terms of GDP per capita, behind would be deterred by fear of failure. However, unlike in
only Qatar and Luxembourg. Sweden, more new entrepreneurs have been finding
As a result of these declining Framework Condition customers outside of the country, with this proportion
scores, the overall entrepreneurial environment rising from 24% to 32% in 2022. More than half of new
quality score for Norway, as measured by the National entrepreneurs expected to use more digital technology
Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI), fell to 5.2 in 2022, in the next six months to sell their products, while one
a rank of 14th, having scored 5.7 and ranked 7th just a in five were expecting to employ another six or more
year earlier. people in five years’ time.
There are some important questions raised Finally, and despite the pandemic, “to make a
by some of the individual framework scores. For difference in the world” remained the dominant agreed
example, how can an economy ranked fifth for motivation among new Norwegian entrepreneurs, as
the quality of its Commercial and Professional it had been since these questions were first asked in
Infrastructure also rank 49th for its Ease of Entry: 2019, although the motivation “to build great wealth
Market Dynamics? How can such a high-income or very high income” was catching up quickly, having
economy be scored as insufficient (<5.0) on both more than doubled in terms of the proportion of new
entrepreneurial finance conditions? entrepreneurs between 2019 and 2022.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Innovation Norway Polarfakta AS


Nord University Business School Professor Gry Agnete Alsos The Norwegian Ministry of Trade,
Industry, and Fisheries
Team members
Contact
Nord University Business School
Marta Lindvert [email protected]
Karin Wigger
Type of institution
Sølvi Solvoll
University
Marit Breivik-Meyer
Website Iselin Kristine Mauseth Steira
https://www.nord.no

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 169


ECONOMY PROFILE

Oman
Q Population (2021): 5.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.1 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
58.5 19
business
To make a difference in the world 32.8 38
Good opportunities to start a business in my
75.7 6
area To build great wealth or very high income 75.1 11
It is easy to start a business 56.5 18 To continue a family tradition 36.9 13
Personally have the skills and knowledge 57.6 25 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 73.2 17
Fear of failure (opportunity) 33.3 46
Entrepreneurial intentions* 44.3 9
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
11.7 23 11.6 11.8
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 4.1 37= 2.6 5.5
1.7 30= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 7.4 30 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 54.6 48 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 48.5 48 Pandemic has led household income to
45.5 25
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 14.4 33
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 25.1 45
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
54.7 21
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 51.9 14

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Oman
I. Social and 4.0 (7/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.9 (10/16)
5.0 (5/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.6 (16/16) 6
4.3 (4/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.7 (14/16) 4.2 (11/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.6 (12/16) 3.7 (13/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure 3.8 (3/16) 0 = very inadequate
4.1 (16/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.9 (7/16) 4.4 (11/16) recorded in brackets

170 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Sultanate of Oman government is implementing little changed since 2020. This may account for the
“Oman Vision 2040”, aiming to diversify the economy fall in the percentage of adults in Oman investing in
and increase the contribution of non-oil sectors. The someone else’s new business, from 14% in 2019 to 8%
Oman economy grew by just over 2% in 2021, with in 2022. Over the same period, the proportion of adults
inflation low at 1.5%. However, recent increases in intending to start their own business has fallen steadily
prices, especially for raw materials and machinery, are each year, from almost two in three to less than one in
putting pressure on business margins and impacting two.
sales turnover and SME sustainability. Most people in Oman know someone who has
The government has changed the legal framework recently started their own business, although the
to support SMEs who have financial claims, or proportion had fallen slightly from seven in 10 in
who have defaulted on bank loans, while the SME 2019 to six in 10 in 2022. More than half of adults in
Development Authority offers financial support Oman consider themselves to have the skills and
through a number of schemes. experience to start a business, and three in four see
good opportunities to do so locally, while a relatively
low one in three of these would be deterred by the fear
2022 Framework Conditions Review of failure.
In 2022, the quality of Oman’s entrepreneurial At the start of the pandemic, the percentage of
environment, as measured by the GEM National adults actually starting or running a new business
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score derived more than doubled, from 7% in 2019 to 16% in 2020. It
from the assessments of its own national experts, has then fell to 13% the following year, and again to 12% in
improved slightly from the year before, scoring 4.2, 2022. However, there are gender differences concealed
less than sufficient (<5.0) and ranked 38th among the by these averages. Female new entrepreneurship
51 GEM economies, but better than 4.1 a year earlier increased sharply between 2019 and 2020, from 6%
(also ranked 38th). In 2022, just one of 13 Framework to 17%, presumably as women sought new incomes
Conditions — Social and Cultural Norms — scored as or seized new opportunities. This rate then fell
sufficient; and, while six conditions had improved their back to 12% in 2021 and 2022. Meanwhile, male new
scores since 2021, seven had lower scores. The largest entrepreneurship also increased in 2020 but much less
increase was for Entrepreneurial Education at School, quickly, and has since fallen back to more or less match
and the largest decrease was for Ease of Entry: Market the female rate in 2022.
Dynamics. The level of EBO in Oman is relatively low, at just
As recently as 2020, Oman had an overall quality 4% in 2022, despite having doubled since 2019. So
of entrepreneurial environment score of 5.1, more in 2022 there were three new businesses for every
than sufficient, and was ranked 13th among GEM established business, implying that the entrepreneurial
economies. In that year, seven Framework Conditions environment has not been conducive to new
were assessed as sufficient, compared to one in 2022. businesses transitioning into established ones.
One indication of this change since 2020 could be in Agreement among new entrepreneurs with the
the score for recovery from the economic impacts motive “to earn a living because jobs are scarce” is
of the pandemic: just 3.9, above only Togo of the 51 up from a half in 2019 to three in four in 2022, now
economies participating in the GEM National Expert matching the proportion agreeing with the motive “to
Survey (NES) in 2022. So the pandemic looks to build great wealth or very high income”.
have had a serious negative impact on the Omani A half of new entrepreneurs expect, in the next six
entrepreneurial environment. months, to use more digital technology to sell their
products, while one in seven expect to employ another
six or more people in five years’ time. Meanwhile,
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review around one in five of those starting new or running
new businesses in Oman in 2022 were selling goods
This negative impact is also shown by more than or services that were either new to their area, new to
two in five adults reporting that the pandemic had Oman or new to the world.
reduced their household income in 2022, a figure

Institution Website Team members APS vendor


http://www.unizwa.edu.om Mr. Bader Alsuleimani
Lead institution Horizons Statistical Consulting
https://www.sme.gov.om/ Prof. Norizan Mohd Kassim
University of Nizwa Ms. Kawther Al Kindi
Other institutions involved
Dr. Swadhin Kumar Mondal Contact
Small and Medium Enterprises
Development Authority Mr. Mohammed Al Maawaly
[email protected]
[email protected]
SMEs Development Authority Team Funders [email protected]
Type of institution [email protected]
Team leader University of Nizwa
University [email protected]
Dr. Abdallah Mohammed Alshukaili SMEs Development Authority
Organization [email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 171


ECONOMY PROFILE

Panama
Q Population (2021): 4.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.7 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
48.0 30
business
To make a difference in the world 68.5 8
Good opportunities to start a business in my
53.4 27=
area To build great wealth or very high income 59.5 23
It is easy to start a business 54.2 21 To continue a family tradition 45.7 7
Personally have the skills and knowledge 76.7 7 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 85.0 8
Fear of failure (opportunity) 48.3 17
Entrepreneurial intentions* 53.0 1=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
27.9 3 24.6 31.2
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.8 28 3.7 7.9
11.2 2 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 3.6 41 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 90.9 2= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 93.7 1 Pandemic has led household income to
70.4 9
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 11.5 37
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 58.1 8
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
80.3 3
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 61.1 7

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Panama
I. Social and 3.1 (16/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.6 (13/16)
5.5 (3/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.5 (7/16) 6
3.0 (12/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.3 (9/16) 4.9 (7/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.0 (15/16) 4.8 (7/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.4 (8/16) 2.6 (8/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.7 (8/16) 4.5 (9/16) recorded in brackets

172 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
After GDP in Panama fell by 18% in 2020 due to the seven in 10, as it has been since this was first asked
pandemic, recovery has been strong, with a 15% in the GEM Adult Population Survey (APS) in 2020.
increase in 2021 and 12% growth in the first quarter of Despite the pandemic, the percentage of adults in
2022. Inflation, running at just 1.5% for consumer prices, Panama investing in someone else’s business has
has had little impact on entrepreneurship. been increasing in recent years, from just 3% in 2018
Since the implementation of Law 186 in 2021/2022, to almost 9% in 2022, although this may simply reflect
regulating entrepreneurship, complex legal procedures poor returns on alternative investment opportunities.
have been simplified, excessive costs reduced and The intention to start a business in the next three years
several tax benefits increased. was both high and rising, up from a half of all adults in
2019 to a bit more than this in 2022.
Entrepreneurial confidence was relatively high
2022 Framework Conditions Review among adults in Panama, with more than three in
The assessed quality of Panama’s overall four agreeing they have the skills and experience
entrepreneurial framework, as measured by its to start their own business. Almost half knew
National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score, someone who has recently started a business,
has endured a roller-coaster ride over the pandemic with a slightly higher proportion seeing good
period. It scored 4.0, ranked 44th in 2019, at the onset opportunities to start a business locally, although,
of the pandemic and increased to 4.2 in 2020, ranked and once more, a half of these would be deterred
32nd, before falling to 3.9 in 2021, ranked 42nd, and by fear of failure.
then surging to 4.3, ranked 34th, in 2022. So both the The percentage of adults starting or running a
overall score and ranking were, in 2022, pretty much new business in Panama has fluctuated in recent
back to what they had been in 2020. years, rising at the onset of the pandemic (from
There is no doubt that Panama’s expert-assessed 23% to 33% between 2019 and 2020), then falling
Framework Conditions in 2022 were much improved back (22% in 2021), and finally increasing in 2022
in 2021, with 12 conditions improving their scores and (to 28%). Over the same period, the relative gender
just one, Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics, falling. These gap in entrepreneurship narrowed slightly. In 2019,
across-the-board improvements were highest for there were four men starting or running a new
Social and Cultural Norms, Entrepreneurial Education business for every three women doing the same.
at School and for Government Entrepreneurial By 2022 this ratio had become five to four. EBO
Programs. These gains were enough to push both has been more stable than new entrepreneurship,
Social and Cultural Norms, and Commercial and falling a little and then increasing (4.7% in 2019 and
Professional Infrastructure, into sufficiency (≥5.0), with 5.8% in 2022).
the former achieving Panama’s highest rank of 17th “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” has
among the 51 GEM economies. been agreed as a motivation by four out of five new
However, there remains much work to be done in entrepreneurs since these questions were introduced
Panama, both to consolidate recent improvements by GEM in 2019. “To make a difference in the world” has
and to begin to address some remaining weaknesses. also been agreed by two-thirds or more over the same
Just how much work can be illustrated by Panama’s period.
national experts’ score of 3.6 for Ease of Access to The percentage of new entrepreneurs in Panama
Entrepreneurial Finance: not Panama’s worst score but with customers beyond that country has fallen
by far its lowest rank — 48th of the 51 economies. recently, from 17% in 2020 to 10% in 2022. One way
to reach customers elsewhere is through digital
technologies: four in five new entrepreneurs expected,
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review in the next six months, to use more digital technology
to sell their products. Job expectations were high, with
The proportion of adults in Panama reporting that two in five new entrepreneurs expecting to employ an
their household income had been reduced by the additional six people in five years’ time.
pandemic remained high in 2022, at more than

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


Foundation
Lead institution Team leader AMPYME
Website
City of Knowledge Foundation Alejandro Carbonell
https://ciudaddelsaber.org/en
Team members
APS vendor
Other institutions involved
Carla Donalicio IPSOS
IESA Management School (Panama
Federico Fernandez Dupouy
Campus)
Cristina Collazos
Contact

[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 173


ECONOMY PROFILE

Poland
Q Population (2021): 37.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 37.5 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
46.7 36
business
To make a difference in the world 16.7 46
Good opportunities to start a business in my
72.3 9
area To build great wealth or very high income 47.6 36
It is easy to start a business 79.4 5 To continue a family tradition 14.4 47
Personally have the skills and knowledge 47.8 40 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 73.1 18
Fear of failure (opportunity) 53.1 6
Entrepreneurial intentions* 2.5 49
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
1.6 49 1.6 1.5
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 9.8 9 9.6 10.0
0.3 49 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 3.7 40 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 85.4 11= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 83.5 16 Pandemic has led household income to
60.8 15
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 19.5 26=
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 30.2 39
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
29.1 46
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 38.1 31

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Poland
I. Social and 3.9 (8/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.4 (14/16)
4.2 (8/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.5 (14/16) 6
2.7 (13/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.0 (12/16) 3.5 (13/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.4 (4/16) 3.4 (15/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.4 (14/16) 1.8 (15/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.8 (16/16) 3.1 (16/16) recorded in brackets

174 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In Q3 2022, Poland’s economy grew by just under 4%. radical actions and significant investment. However,
Higher energy and food prices pushed inflation to 16% much of the blame for the falling quality of Poland’s
in October 2022. The labour market remained robust, entrepreneurial environment can be attributed to the
with unemployment at an all-time low of 5%. Higher war next door in Ukraine and its repercussions, which
prices and increasing energy costs were the primary appear to have impacted Poland more than Ukraine’s
concerns of entrepreneurs, some of whom may have other neighbours in the 2022 GEM economies
been deterred by rising economic uncertainty. (Hungary, the Slovak Republic and Romania).
Poland introduced widespread tax reforms in 2022
(the “Polish Deal)”, raising tax thresholds and providing
some extra incentives for entrepreneurs, including tax 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
reliefs for robotization and for prototypes, as well as As in 2021, more than half of Polish adults reported that
relief to encourage Poles to return from abroad. the pandemic had reduced their household income
in 2022, the highest level among European economies
participating in the 2022 Adult Population Survey
2022 Framework Conditions Review
(APS). Perhaps as a result, adults in Poland had very
Poland continued to score below average for the quality low business intentions, with just under 3% expecting
of all its Framework Conditions, apart from Ease of Entry: to start a business in the next three years, well below
Market Dynamics, compared to other Level B economies the pre-pandemic level of 8% in 2019.
in the 2022 GEM National Expert Survey (NES).. The The percentage of adults starting or running a
quality of its entrepreneurial framework actually new business in Poland collapsed at the start of
diminished in 2022, with its score for overall quality in the pandemic, from 5.4% in 2019 to 3.% in 2020, and
the National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) has continued to fall, reaching 1.7% in 2022 as rising
falling from 4.2 in 2021 (36th) to just 3.8 in 2022 (45th). tensions and the conflict in next-door Ukraine have
This reduction was because of falls in nine of 13 compounded the impacts of rising prices and business
framework condition scores, leaving Poland with just uncertainty. This in an economy where almost 9% of
two conditions assessed as sufficient (≥5.0): Ease of adults were starting or running a new business just
Entry: Market Dynamics and Physical Infrastructure, five years ago. EBO had also fallen, though not as
Eleven are insufficient, usually by a wide margin. sharply: from 12% in 2020 to 10% in 2022. Given the low
Eight Framework Conditions scored less than four in level of new starts, future falls in the level of established
2022, compared to five the year before. Government businesses may be likely.
must bear at least some of the responsibility for this In terms of social perceptions, Poland was little
deterioration, with both government policy conditions different from its neighbours, or indeed the European
and Government Entrepreneurial Programs having average. A half of Polish adults reported knowing a
lower scores this year than last. One bright note was new entrepreneur, and three out of four saw good
slightly higher scores for both educational Framework conditions to start a new business, although more than
Conditions. half would have been deterred from doing so by the
The expert assessment of the Entrepreneurial fear of failure.
Framework Conditions has never been so pessimistic The small number of new entrepreneurs in Poland
in the 11-year history of collecting GEM data in in 2022 make it very difficult to compare within that
Poland. Even conditions such as Ease of Access to group. “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” has
Entrepreneurial Finance, Government Entrepreneurial become by far the dominant motivation, agreed by
Programs, Government Policy: Support and Relevance almost three-quarters of new entrepreneurs. Relatively
and Commercial and Professional Infrastructure saw few new entrepreneurs in Poland had customers
a drop from usually decent scores. Areas that have outside of that country, although a significant
needed action for years, such as level of Research and proportion (three in 10) expected to use more digital
Development Transfers as well as Government Policy: technology in the next six months to sell their
Taxes and Bureaucracy, were assessed even lower this products. Just one in 10 new entrepreneurs expected
year. to employ another six or more people in five years’
These results constitute a red flag for the Polish time.
government and require appropriate strategies,

Institution Website Team members University of Economics in Katowice


https://en.parp.gov.pl Melania Nieć
Lead institution
Other institutions involved
Anna Skowrońska APS vendor
Polish Agency for Enterprise Paulina Zadura
Development (PARP) Polish Agency for Enterprise
Robert Zakrzewski Centrum Badań Marketingowych
Development
INDICATOR Sp. z o.o.
University of Economics in Katowice Przemysław Zbierowski

Contact
Team Funders
Type of institution [email protected]
Team leader Ministry of Development Funds and
Public Body Regional Policy
Anna Tarnawa

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 175


ECONOMY PROFILE

Puerto Rico
Q Population (2021): 3.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
66.0 9
business
To make a difference in the world 70.6 6
Good opportunities to start a business in my
64.1 13
area To build great wealth or very high income 48.6 33
It is easy to start a business 26.7 45 To continue a family tradition 29.5 25
Personally have the skills and knowledge 68.9 14 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 67.2 24
Fear of failure (opportunity) 45.2 21
Entrepreneurial intentions* 26.3 17
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
20.0 8= 17.9 22.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 5.6 31= 3.4 8.0
6.3 8 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 9.5 26 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 89.4 6 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 90.3 6 Pandemic has led household income to
56.0 20
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 22.4 21
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 55.1 11
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
78.4 5
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 66.9 3

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Puerto Rico
I. Social and 3.6 (11/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.6 (12/16)
4.6 (6/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.1 (15/16) 6
2.5 (14/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.6 (15/16) 2.6 (15/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.9 (11/16) 4.1 (9/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure 2.2 (13/16) 0 = very inadequate
4.9 (12/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.5 (9/16) 4.8 (7/16) recorded in brackets

176 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
For the fiscal year to end June 2022, the Puerto Rico 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
economy grew by around 4%, with an unemployment
Puerto Rico last participated in the GEM Adult
rate of 6% and consumer prices rising a little faster
Population Survey (APS) in 2019, pre-pandemic, so
than this. Rising energy costs have added to the
comparisons are limited to then and 2022. Levels of
already high costs of doing business in Puerto Rico,
entrepreneurial activity have improved substantially
while changing household consumption patterns
over that period, despite more than half of adults in
in response to rising prices is adding to business
Puerto Rico reporting that the pandemic had reduced
uncertainty.
their household income in 2022.
In May 2022, the Department of Economic
The percentage of adults starting or running a new
Development and Commerce (DDEC, in Spanish)
business in Puerto Rico increased from 13.4% in 2019
unveiled PRopósito (“purpose”), a strategic framework
to 20% in 2022. The percentage of adults running an
including entrepreneurship as a growth pillar that is
established business increased at an even faster rate,
intended to create a more competitive entrepreneurial
from a very low 1.3% in 2019 to a more sustainable
ecosystem by streamlining the permit process and
5.6% in 2022, reducing the ratio of adults starting a
facilitating access to capital programs, incentives and
new business to those running an established one,
other benefits.
from an extreme of 10 to one to a still high five to
one. Men are more likely than women to be starting a
2022 Framework Conditions Review new business, roughly three male starts to every two
female ones.
Puerto Rico did not participate in the 2021 GEM National Corresponding to these increases in
Expert Survey (NES), so comparisons will mostly be entrepreneurial activity rates has been
made between 2020 and 2022 results. In terms of the improvements in social perceptions. In 2020, two
quality of its overall entrepreneurial environment, as out of three adults knew someone who had recently
assessed by its national experts and as measured by the started a business, having been less than a half in
National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI), Puerto 2019. The share of adults considering themselves
Rico has been improving steadily in recent years, from a to have the skills and experience to start their own
score of 3.2 in 2019, ranked 53rd of 54 economies, to 3.6 business followed a similar pattern, rising from
in 2020, 42nd of 44, and then to a score of 3.8, ranked just over a half to almost seven in 10, as did the
42nd of 51 economies in the GEM NES in 2022. proportion seeing good opportunities to start a
However, the entrepreneurial environment in Puerto business locally, from just two in five in 2019 to more
Rico remains weak, despite those improvements, with than three in five in 2022.
12 of 13 Framework Conditions scored as insufficient In 2019, “to earn a living because jobs are scarce” had
(<5.0) in 2022, one more than two years earlier. In that been the most commonly agreed motivation among
two-year period, eight conditions did improve their new entrepreneurs in Puerto Rico, agreed by more
scores, including both government policy conditions, than four in five, with two-thirds agreeing with “to
both entrepreneurial education conditions and the make a difference in the world”. By 2022 this situation
score for Government Entrepreneurial Programs, had been reversed, with more than seven out of 10
which, with the policy changes noted above, provides agreeing with making a difference and just under
clear indications that the Puerto Rico government is two-thirds with making a living.
increasing its commitment to entrepreneurship. Also in 2022, four out of five of those starting or
There is much room for continuing improvement, running a new business expected, in the next six
with Puerto Rico still having six conditions ranked in months, to use more digital technology to sell their
the bottom 10 of the 51 economies. Government Policy: products, while three in 10 expected to employ another
Taxes and Bureaucracy was the lowest, ranked at 49th. six or more people in five years’ time, up from a quarter
Conversely, Puerto Rico had no conditions in the top in 2019.
half of ranks in 2022. Its highest-ranked condition was
Social and Cultural Norms at 28th.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader University of Puerto Rico School of Gaither International
University of Puerto Rico School of Theany M. Calderon Abreu Business, Rio Piedras Campus
Business, Rio Piedras Campus Banco Popular de Puerto Rico
Team members
Contact
The Department of Economic
Arleen Hernandez Development and Commerce [email protected]
Segundo Castro
Jairo Arturo Ayala

Type of institution
Business School

Website
https://www.uprrp.edu/english/

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 177


ECONOMY PROFILE

Qatar
Q Population (2021): 2.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 93.5 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
64.2 10
business
To make a difference in the world 46.9 26
Good opportunities to start a business in my
81.0 3
area To build great wealth or very high income 82.0 4
It is easy to start a business 67.3 11 To continue a family tradition 32.5 20
Personally have the skills and knowledge 64.1 19 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 59.9 33
Fear of failure (opportunity) 43.0 29
Entrepreneurial intentions* 43.6 10
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
10.7 25= 11.0 10.6
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 3.9 39 2.1 4.4
6.2 9 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 11.5 23 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 78.7 22 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 82.7 17 Pandemic has led household income to
44.1 28
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 27.5 17
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 36.0 32
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
55.6 18
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 60.0 8

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Qatar
I. Social and 4.8 (16/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.8 (13/22)
6.7 (4/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.6 (13/22) 6
5.2 (11/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.1 (9/22) 5.7 (9/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.0 (6/22) 5.8 (13/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.0 (10/22) 5.7 (3/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.6 (4/22) 6.2 (2/22) recorded in brackets

178 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Qatar economy grew by more than 6% in Q2 were also relatively high, with 11% of adults investing in
2022, with consumer prices rising by just under 5% in someone else’s new business in 2022.
October 2022, while unemployment was virtually zero Just under a half of all adults in Qatar intend to
in Qatar (0.3%). start their own business in the next three years, a
proportion that has, despite the pandemic, changed
little in the last four years. However, the proportion
2022 Framework Conditions Review actually doing so is much lower, with just 11% of
In 2019, pre-pandemic, the quality of Qatar’s adults in Qatar starting or running their own business
entrepreneurial environment, as assessed by its in 2022, well down on the 17% two years earlier.
experts, was expressed by a National Entrepreneurial This proportion had increased at the start of the
Context Index (NECI) score of 5.9, ranking Qatar third pandemic, having been 15% in 2019, but has fallen
among the GEM economies. By 2020 this score had year by year since. Women were slightly more likely
declined to 5.7, with a ranking of eighth, and by 2021 than men to be starting their own business in Qatar
to 5.5, but still ranked eighth. In 2022, Qatar’s NECI in 2022, as they had been pre-pandemic in 2019. In
score jumped back to 5.7. However, improvements between, however, the rate of men starting new
in entrepreneurial environments elsewhere meant businesses was much higher than that of women. So
that this score only placed it 10th out of the 51 GEM at the onset of the pandemic, and in its early days,
economies in 2022. many more men than women took the opportunity
Qatar’s NECI score increase can be attributed to to start their own business. By 2022, virtual parity had
improvements in the assessed quality of seven of the been restored.
13 Framework Conditions between 2021 and 2022. Two out of three adults in Qatar know someone
The biggest increases were for Social and Cultural who has recently started a business, or consider they
Norms, and for Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics, with have the skills and experience to do so themselves.
modest increases elsewhere. Two conditions saw their More than four in five see good opportunities to start
scores decline slightly — Research and Development a business locally, but nearly half of these would be
Transfers and Physical Infrastructure. Qatar scores very deterred by fear of failure.
well on both entrepreneurial education conditions “To build great wealth or very high income” has
(school and post-school stage), each ranked third been the most common motivation among new
out of 51 economies, but relatively poorly on both the entrepreneurs since this question was introduced by
level of, and access to, entrepreneurial finance. Finally, GEM, and was agreed by more than four out of five
Qatar’s national experts rated its recovery from the in 2022. “To continue a family tradition” got some
economic effects of the pandemic as well sufficient, support, agreed by a third.
but firmly in the middle range of GEM economies. Almost a quarter of those starting or running a new
business have customers outside of Qatar, a proportion
that has been fairly stable in recent years. About a half
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review expect, in the next six months, to use more digital
technology to sell their products. Job expectations are
The proportion of adults in Qatar reporting that very strong, with three out of five new entrepreneurs
their household income had declined because of expecting to employ another six or more people in five
the pandemic was 44% in 2022 but lower than a year years’ time.
earlier, when it had been 52%. Informal investments

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Qatar Development Bank (QDB) Wise Consultancy
Qatar Development Bank Farha Al Kuwari

Team members
Contact
Ahmed Badawy [email protected]
Mohammed Abughali
Dalal Al Shammari
Type of institution
Public Body

Website
https://www.qdb.qa/en

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 179


ECONOMY PROFILE

Republic of Korea
Q Population (2021): 51.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 46.9 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
39.5 41
business
To make a difference in the world 8.4 49
Good opportunities to start a business in my
41.0 39
area To build great wealth or very high income 79.2 7
It is easy to start a business 37.4 35 To continue a family tradition 4.6 49
Personally have the skills and knowledge 54.8 27 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 27.1 48
Fear of failure (opportunity) 18.3 49
Entrepreneurial intentions* 23.9 18
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
11.9 22 8.5 15.2
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 19.9 1 15.3 24.3
4.0 13= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 4.7 36 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 67.7 41 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 62.2 42 Pandemic has led household income to
35.0 31
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 15.4 32
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 49.6 19
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
46.4 31
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 10.5 49

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Republic of Korea
I. Social and 5.2 (10/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.2 (8/22)
5.9 (7/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.4 (8/22) 6
6.2 (4/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.9 (10/22) 5.9 (7/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.8 (1/22) 6.2 (7/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.2 (19/22) 4.6 (6/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (10/22) 5.1 (12/22) recorded in brackets

180 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In 2021, Korean GDP reached almost $1,800 billion, with business in the next three years: again, a proportion
inflation and unemployment both running at less than that has changed little.
3%. However, recent price increases have dampened Two in five Korean adults knew someone who had
investor sentiment for late startups, and the started a business, or saw good opportunities locally
venture capital industry is shifting to an investment to do so themselves. Confidence was abundant, with
atmosphere that focuses on fund recovery rather than more than half of adults considering themselves as
growth potential. having the skills and experience to start their own.
Another indication of that confidence was that less
than one in five of those seeing good opportunities
2022 Framework Conditions Review locally would be deterred by the fear of failure.
The Republic of Korea has a high-quality Despite this confidence, the percentage of Korean
entrepreneurial environment. In 2022, just three of adults starting or running a new business has
its 13 Framework Conditions were rated by experts fallen slowly through the pandemic to 12% in 2022,
as insufficient (<5.0), and only one (Entrepreneurial having been 15% in 2019. Over the same period, the
Education at School) by a significant margin. In entrepreneurial gender gap has widened. In 2019 three
2022, seven Framework Conditions had improved men were starting a new business for every woman
scores over 2021, while four saw their scores doing the same. Female new entrepreneurship has
decline, and none by much. In 2022, the Republic fallen faster than that of men since, so that by 2022
of Korea had six Framework Conditions ranked in there were nearly two men starting a business for
the top 10 of the 51 economies, and just one in the every woman doing so.
lower half of ranks: Commercial and Professional EBO tells a very different story, having risen from 13%
Infrastructure. in 2019 to 20% in 2022. That story is the exact opposite
The Republic of Korea’s overall quality of to nearby China. In 2019 in Korea there was just over
entrepreneurial environment score in 2022, as one adult running an established business for every
measured by the National Entrepreneurial Context adult starting a new business. By 2022, there were
Index (NECI), was 5.7, ranking it ninth out of the 51 GEM almost two adults running an established business for
economies. In 2021, its score had been the same, but it every adult starting a new one.
ranked one place higher at eighth. The Republic of Korea’s new entrepreneurs are very
Two of the Korean Framework Conditions were consistent in their choice of motivations. In 2022, three
assessed as insufficient in 2022 by the smallest of times as many Koreans agreed with the motivation “to
margins: just a slight improvement could push them build great wealth or very high income” over the other
into sufficiency. The third, Entrepreneurial Education motivation options. Building great wealth has been
at School, as in many economies, requires substantial the dominant motivation for new entrepreneurs in the
new investment for long-term improvements. Republic of Korea since this question was introduced
by GEM in 2019.
In 2022, around a half of new entrepreneurs in the
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review Republic expect to use more digital technology to sell
their products in the next six months, while a third
The Republic of Korea has felt the economic impacts expect to employ an additional six or more people
of the pandemic, with a third of adults reporting that in five years’ time. Finally, the percentage of new
it had reduced their household income in 2022, a entrepreneurs with customers beyond the Republic of
proportion little changed in two years. Despite this, Korea has been increasing slowly over the pandemic
in 2022 around a quarter of adults expected to start a period, from 14% in 2019 to 19% in 2022.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Ministry of SMEs and Startups Korea Research & Institute
Korea Institute of Startup & Yongmun Kim
Entrepreneurship Development Contact
(KISED) Team members
Myoung-jong Lee [email protected]
Min-Wook Noh [email protected]
Dongha Lee
Heeju Lim
Type of institution
Research Institute

Website
www.kised.or.kr

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 181


ECONOMY PROFILE

Romania
Q Population (2021): 19.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 35.4 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
46.2 37
business
To make a difference in the world 81.7 1
Good opportunities to start a business in my
63.8 14
area To build great wealth or very high income 74.3 12
It is easy to start a business 42.5 31 To continue a family tradition 41.3 9
Personally have the skills and knowledge 62.7 24 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 71.1 19
Fear of failure (opportunity) 55.7 4
Entrepreneurial intentions* 6.4 43=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.3 34= 6.5 9.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 8.6 14 7.1 10.1
2.0 28 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 13.7 19 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 88.8 7 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 85.0 13 Pandemic has led household income to
33.8 32
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 21.2 23
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 43.9 23
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
38.4 38
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 63.0 6

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Romania
I. Social and 3.9 (9/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.9 (9/16)
3.6 (14/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.8 (11/16) 6
3.0 (11/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.5 (8/16) 4.6 (9/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.5 (8/16) 3.6 (14/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.7 (6/16) 2.4 (11/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.3 (12/16) 4.7 (8/16) recorded in brackets

182 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Romanian economy grew by more than 5% in with Ukraine and can be expected to have been
Q2 2022, but with a downturn anticipated later in the significantly impacted by events there. In addition,
year. The economic environment was burdened by a third of adults in Romania reported that their
inflationary pressures, with rising costs transmitted household income had fallen in 2022 because of the
into higher consumer prices by resilient demand, pandemic.
especially in the food sector. Inflation, plus changes Perhaps reflecting the instability of the regional
in the Fiscal Code, have encouraged entrepreneurs to situation, the level of TEA fell from 9.7% in 2021 to 8.3%
invest in digitization and automation to reduce costs. in 2022, although this was largely the result of sharp
fall in female entrepreneurship (down from 9.6%
to 6.5%), while male entrepreneurship actually rose
2022 Framework Conditions Review slightly. Consequently, the entrepreneurial gender
Romania has been improving its entrepreneurial gap widened substantially, with three men starting or
framework recently, with increased scores for running a new business for every two women doing
seven of 13 Framework Conditions in the period the same in Romania in 2022.
2021–2022, pushing Romania’s overall entrepreneurial In contrast, the level of EBO more than doubled
environment score in the National Entrepreneurial over the same period, from 4.1% to 8.6%, and almost
Context Index (NECI) up to 4.2 from 4.0 a year matched the level of TEA. Only 6% of Romanian
earlier, with a rise in Romania’s relative rank adults intended to start a business in the next three
from 40th to 36th. The largest increases were for years, down from 15% a year earlier. Nearly half of
Entrepreneurial Education Post-School and for Romanian adults knew someone who had recently
Research and Development Transfers, although started a business, so there is no lack of role models,
both remain less than sufficient (<5.0), and for Ease while two-thirds considered they have the skills and
of Entry: Market Dynamics, pushing this score into experience to start a business themselves, so no lack
sufficiency. Romania’s other sufficient scores are for of confidence. A similar proportion saw good local
its Commercial and Professional Infrastructure and for opportunities to start a business, but well over half of
its Physical Infrastructure, suggesting that the major these would be deterred by fear of failure, an increase
obstacles to entrepreneurial development in Romania from the previous year. This is an increasingly common
are either financial resources (levels of, and access to, constraint on business intentions, and not just in
entrepreneurial finance) or are within the purview of Romania.
the government, including both policies, programs “To make a difference in the world” was the
and education. motivation agreed by most new entrepreneurs in 2022,
Entrepreneurship in Romania may now be at a followed by “to build great wealth or very high income”.
crossroads, with a government that has to decide how A year earlier, “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”
it prioritizes enterprise development. It is easy, but had been the most popular motivation. As in Hungary,
mistaken, to regard spending on entrepreneurship the proportion of new entrepreneurs with customers
education and programs as a current cost rather than outside the country had increased in the past year,
as an investment in the future. though more modestly in Romania (from 14% to
16%). However, a quarter of new entrepreneurs were
expecting to employ six or more additional people in
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review the next five years. Just as positively, the percentage
of those starting or running a new business who
Like its neighbour Hungary, Romania has only expected to use more digital technologies to sell their
participated in GEM in the last two years. Also like products in the next six months increased from 28% in
Hungary, Romania shares a border (much longer) 2021 to 38% in 2022.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Faculty of Economics and Business Metro Media Transilvania
Faculty of Economics and Business Szabó Tünde Petra Administration, Babes-Bolyai
Administration, Babes-Bolyai University
Team members
Contact
University
Dézsi-Benyovszki Annamária [email protected]
Bálint Csaba
Györfy Lehel-Zoltán
Szász Levente
Type of institution Benedek Botond
University Csala Dénes

Website
https://econ.ubbcluj.ro/

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 183


ECONOMY PROFILE

Saudi Arabia
Q Population (2021): 35.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 49.6 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
88.2 1
business
To make a difference in the world 64.6 11
Good opportunities to start a business in my
89.5 1
area To build great wealth or very high income 87.3 1
It is easy to start a business 88.7 1 To continue a family tradition 61.9 2
Personally have the skills and knowledge 88.1 1 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 85.2 7
Fear of failure (opportunity) 63.3 1
Entrepreneurial intentions* 31.8 14
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
19.2 10= 16.1 21.6
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 9.7 10 10.1 9.5
4.5 12 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 5.2 34 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 79.5 21 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 82.5 18= Pandemic has led household income to
47.9 24
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 4.2 47
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 15.5 48
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
62.1 12
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 67.2 2

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Saudi Arabia
I. Social and 6.4 (2/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.7 (3/22)
7.2 (2/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.8 (2/22) 6
6.9 (2/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
6.2 (4/22) 6.1 (4/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.3 (2/22) 6.4 (6/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.2 (7/22) 4.6 (7/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.9 (11/22) 5.8 (5/22) recorded in brackets

184 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The outlook for Saudi Arabia’s economy is positive, 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
particularly if the reform process can stay on course
In 2022, compared to 2020, COVID-19 had a less
and investment keeps flowing into the nation’s key
negative impact on business startup activity and this
initiatives and expansion areas. However, rising costs
was especially the case in Saudi Arabia. With COVID-19
are squeezing business margins. Government policies
rates declining and fewer restrictions, business activity
have simplified the process of starting a firm and
has rebounded, and businesses had time to adapt to
made it simpler for foreign corporations to invest in
any lasting changes that had taken place. Additionally,
the economy, two factors that are essential to the
a lower proportion of Established Business Owners
kingdom’s long-term development ambitions under
were perceiving constraints on growth from the
the Vision 2030.
pandemic, compared to 2020.
Societal attitudes are highly positive in Saudi Arabia,
2022 Framework Conditions Review with 95% or more of adults stating entrepreneurship
is a good career choice, and that entrepreneurs have
Saudi Arabia is a clear example of an economy that high status and media attention. Somewhat fewer
has invested heavily in its entrepreneurial environment (89%) state it is easy to start a business — a high
in recent years and seen that environments improve. percentage nonetheless. A similar amount (88%) know
The highest-rated condition in Saudi Arabia is in at least one entrepreneur personally, a result that
Physical Infrastructure: services and structures that jumped back up after low results the prior two years
facilitate communication, transportation and other which were likely due to reduced personal interaction
business operations. Also highly rated are Ease of during the pandemic.
Entry: Market Dynamics — the extent to which there Nearly 90% of adults in Saudi Arabia see good
is a free and open market — and Social and Cultural opportunities to start a business locally and believe
Norms that encourage acceptance, support and they have the capabilities for entrepreneurship. But
high regard for entrepreneurship. Among the lowest- fear of failure continues to climb, reaching 57% of those
rated, but showing the most improvement, was seeing opportunities. Nonetheless, startup intentions
entrepreneurship education, both at primary- and are high (32%) and so is TEA (19%). Contributing to
secondary-school level and in higher education and these high rates was a jump in startup activity among
vocational training. the youngest age group. This is important, because
Compared to the average for the other 21 Level Saudi Arabia has a young population, with nearly 40%
A economies participating in GEM this year, Saudi of citizens under 25 years of age.
Arabia has higher rankings on all conditions, especially Most notably, EBO rates increased to 10%. This was a
Government Policy: Support and Relevance. Research concern in prior years, as EBO had hovered at around
and Development Transfers is among the lowest- 5% or lower, among the lowest in the Level A group.
rated, although close to the average for the Level A Support for entrepreneurship, and the popularity of
economies. This refers to the transfer of research and this, along with high and increasing startup rates,
development from universities and research centres to started to materialize into mature business activity.
the business sector and the degree to which engineers Most entrepreneurs in Saudi Arabia start consumer-
and scientists can commercialize research findings. focused businesses, accounting for 89% of TEA.
With regard to government efforts to counter the Similarly, 85% of EBO is in the consumer sector.
negative effects of COVID-19, the experts had positive This is distinct among the Level A economies and is
comments about government measures and policies accompanied by low participation in medium- and
in general, specific programs addressing the impact high-technology industries (less than 2% for TEA and
of COVID-19, support for digitalization, subsidies for for EBO). This is likely to command increased attention
employment preservation, wage subsidies, deferment as the Kingdom’s 2030 vision emphasizes the creation
of tax liabilities, credit and loan repayment extensions, of jobs, economic opportunities for entrepreneurs and
and financial support. the diversification of the economy.

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


Business School
Lead institution Team leader The Babson Global Center for
Website Entrepreneurial Leadership (BGCEL)
Prince Mohammed bin Salman Prof. Muhammad Azam Roomi, PhD
College (MBSC) https://www.mbsc.edu.sa at MBSC
David Abdow
Other institutions involved
Team members APS vendor
Emaar The Economic City
Alicia Coduras
Kim Stanhouse Field Interactibe-MR, Market Research
Babson Global Center for Provider, monitored by Opinometre
Donna Kelley Institute LLS
Entrepreneurial Leadership (BGCEL)

Contact

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 185


ECONOMY PROFILE

Serbia
Q Population (2021): 6.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 21.4 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
54.6 22
business
To make a difference in the world 21.6 45
Good opportunities to start a business in my
37.8 42
area To build great wealth or very high income 43.4 41
It is easy to start a business 32.7 40 To continue a family tradition 22.6 37=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 66.1 18 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 81.0 13
Fear of failure (opportunity) 41.3 34
Entrepreneurial intentions* 12.4 34
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
10.5 27 6.4 14.7
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 2.9 44= 1.8 4.1
1.3 36= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 7.9 29 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 74.0 27 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 78.3 22 Pandemic has led household income to
50.2 22
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 13.6 34=
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 29.4 41
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
33.1 43
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 20.3 46

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Serbia
I. Social and 3.7 (10/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.3 (5/16)
4.0 (12/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.0 (3/16) 6
4.1 (6/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.8 (5/16) 6.0 (2/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.4 (9/16) 5.0 (5/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.2 (10/16) 2.5 (10/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.9 (6/16) 3.5 (15/16) recorded in brackets

186 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In a year characterized by the global energy crisis and business was a rare activity in Serbia, undertaken by
the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, Serbia experienced just 3% of adults, one of the lowest levels among the
a record-high level of direct foreign investments - in economies surveyed by GEM.
2022, the amount invested by foreign companies and Fewer than one in eight adults in Serbia expected
individuals exceeded four billion EUR. GDP growth to start a business in the next three years, the second-
forecast for 2023 is between 2.5 and 3%. The inflation lowest rate among Level B economies, just above
rate in 2022 was over 15%. This has greatly impacted Hungary, and fourth lowest of the GEM economies
entrepreneurs in the country as the costs of inputs behind Japan and South Africa as well. On most other
increase, including borrowing costs. indicators, Serbia was close to the middle of the GEM
Over the past decade, the Serbian Government economies.
has worked to steadily improve the entrepreneurship More than half of Serbian adults knew someone
ecosystem, including a range of programs of the Serbia who had recently started a new business, and
Innovation Fund. two-thirds considered themselves as having the skills
and experience to do the same. A similar proportion
saw good opportunities to start a business locally,
2022 Framework Conditions Review although two in five of these would be deterred by fear
In 2022 Serbia’s National Entrepreneurial Context Index of failure.
(NECI) score for the overall quality of its entrepreneurial The percentage of adults starting or running a new
environment was 4.6, almost exactly in the middle business in Serbia was 10.5% in 2022, although male
of the 51 GEM economies, being ranked 27th. In the new entrepreneurship was higher at 14.7% and female
assessments of its individual framework scores, Serbia new entrepreneurship lower at 6.4%, meaning that
was scored by its national experts as sufficient (≥5.0) there were more than two Serbian men starting a new
in five conditions and insufficient in the remaining business for every woman doing the same. Meanwhile,
eight. Serbia’s lowest scores were for entrepreneurial EBO was relatively low at just under 3%, implying
education, both in schools and post-school, and for a ratio of more than three people starting a new
the level of entrepreneurial finance. The former is business for every one running an established one.
an obvious opportunity for the Serbian government Turning those new into established businesses will
to improve its entrepreneurial environment, while be a major challenge for the Serbian entrepreneurial
the latter may encourage those Serbians starting environment.
a business to look beyond conventional sources of Making a living because jobs are scarce was by
finance. far the most common agreed motive among new
More positively, Serbia scored relatively well for entrepreneurs, with more than four out of five in
its Government Entrepreneurial Programs and for agreement. The next highest was building great
its Physical Infrastructure. Both of these are good wealth or very high income, with just two in five
foundations for an entrepreneurial future. Serbia agreeing.
also scored fairly highly in its experts’ assessment of Fewer than one in five of Serbia’s new entrepreneurs
recovery from the economic impacts of the pandemic. had customers beyond its borders, a figure that
is unlikely to improve given that just one in three
expected to use more digital technology to sell
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review their products in the next six months. This was the
second lowest proportion of the Level B economies,
One in two adults in Serbia reported that the and seventh lowest of the 51 economies in GEM in
pandemic had reduced their household income 2022. One in eight of those starting or running a new
in 2022, just about in the middle of the Level business in Serbia expected to employ another six or
B economies. Investing in someone else’s new more people in the next three years.

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


University
Lead institution Team leader Government of Serbia
Website European Union
University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Ugljesa Marjanovic
Technical Sciences https://www.uns.ac.rs/index. World Bank
php/en/faculties/ffaculties/ Team members
faculty-technical-sciences Igor Graić
Bojan Lalić
APS vendor

IPSOS

Contact

[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 187


ECONOMY PROFILE

Slovak Republic
Q Population (2021): 5.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 33.0 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
59.3 16
business
To make a difference in the world 29.2 42
Good opportunities to start a business in my
29.4 45
area To build great wealth or very high income 36.5 49
It is easy to start a business 20.4 48 To continue a family tradition 29.9 23
Personally have the skills and knowledge 42.9 43 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 78.8 15
Fear of failure (opportunity) 42.9 30=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 8.6 39
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
10.7 25= 9.5 11.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.6 24 4.0 9.1
0.7 47 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 14.0 18 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 71.1 34 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 70.7 34 Pandemic has led household income to
56.6 19
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 22.6 20
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 9.3 49
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
34.0 42
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 32.6 38

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Slovak Republic
I. Social and 4.4 (5/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 4.7 (3/16)
3.2 (16/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.6 (6/16) 6
3.5 (9/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.9 (3/16) 4.2 (10/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.7 (6/16) 3.9 (11/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.7 (4/16) 2.9 (5/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.2 (13/16) 4.2 (12/16) recorded in brackets

188 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The war in Ukraine and the global energy crisis 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
reduced economic growth in the Slovak Republic to
The Slovak Republic has been heavily affected by the
just under 2% in 2022, with inflation at around 16%.
pandemic, with more than half of adults reporting
Rising business costs have led to more indebtedness
that the it had reduced their household income in
and liquidity problems, contributing to pessimism that
2022, a proportion little changed since 2020. As in
is expected to reduce business activity.
many GEM participating economies, the percentage
of adults investing in someone else’s new business fell
2022 Framework Conditions Review in the early days of the pandemic but has recovered
strongly, reaching one in 10 in 2022 (having been one
According to the assessments of its own national in eight in 2019). One influence may be the shortage
experts, the Slovak Republic’s entrepreneurial of entrepreneurial finance from other sources, noted
environment is improving slowly, but remains earlier.
fairly weak on a number of fronts. Five conditions Business intentions also fell in those early days of
within the National Entrepreneurship Context the pandemic (from 20% in 2019 to 8% in 2021), but
Index (NECI) were assessed as poor (score <4.0) in have yet to recover fully, reaching just 9% in 2022. The
2022: Government Policy: Support and Relevance, percentage of adults actually starting or running their
Government Entrepreneurial Programs, Research own business in the Slovak Republic more than halved
and Development Transfers, Social and Cultural as the impacts of the pandemic deepened (from 14%
Norms and Entrepreneurial Education at School. in 2020 to 6% in 2021), but has since increased to 11%,
Government is influential in each of these, and despite events next door in Ukraine. In the process, the
could do much more to support entrepreneurship, absolute entrepreneurial gender gap has fallen, from
encourage people to start a business and celebrate six percentage points in 2019 to just two in 2022. The
successful entrepreneurs. While both scores of the level of EBO has been more stable, increasing slightly
government policy conditions improved in 2022, each at the start of the pandemic and hovering at around
is still some way from sufficiency. 6.5% since.
Another improved area in 2022 were the two ease Social perceptions in the Slovak Republic presented
of entry conditions, while access to commercial and a mixed picture in 2022, with six in 10 knowing
professional services also improved. Both education someone who has recently started a business, four
and entrepreneurial finance experiences were in 10 agreeing they have the skills and experience
mixed, with improving scores for Ease of Access to to start their own, but just three in 10 seeing good
Entrepreneurial Finance, but decreasing availability opportunities to start a business locally.
of that finance. Similarly, assessed entrepreneurial “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” has
education in schools improved, but post-school been by far the dominant agreed motivation for new
declined. entrepreneurs in the Slovak Republic since these
One consequence of these changes is that the questions were introduced by GEM in 2019, with four
overall assessed quality of the entrepreneurial out of five agreeing in 2022. Agreement with the
environment in the Slovak Republic, as measured by its motivation “to make a difference in the world” has
NECI score, improved from 4.3 in 2021 (ranked 33rd) to declined from four out of 10 new entrepreneurs in 2019
4.4 in 2022 (ranked 31st). One influence may have been to three out of 10 in 2022.
the Slovak Republic’s handling of the response to the In the year to 2022, the proportion of those starting
economic effects of the pandemic, rated by its experts or running a new business who, in the next six months,
as more than sufficient. intend to use more digital technology to sell their
products doubled, from one in six to one in three.
However, the percentage of new entrepreneurs who
expect to employ another six or more people in five
years’ time has fallen sharply, from 29% in 2020 to just
6% in 2022.

Institution Type of institution Team Funders


University
Lead institution Team leader Slovak Business Agency (SBA)
Website Comenius University in Bratislava,
Comenius University in Bratislava, Prof. Ing. Anna Pilková, PhD, MBA
Faculty of Management https://www.fm.uniba.sk/en Faculty of Management
Team members
Other institutions involved
Assoc. Prof. Marian Holienka, PhD
Slovak Business Agency (SBA) APS vendor
RNDr. Zuzana Kovačičová, PhD
Mgr. Juraj Mikuš, PhD Actly s. r. o.
Mgr. Ján Rehák, PhD
Contact

[email protected]

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 189


ECONOMY PROFILE

Slovenia
Q Population (2021): 2.1 million (IMF)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 43.6 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
53.5 24
business
To make a difference in the world 50.2 22
Good opportunities to start a business in my
55.0 26
area To build great wealth or very high income 57.0 24
It is easy to start a business 67.7 9= To continue a family tradition 29.8 24
Personally have the skills and knowledge 62.8 22= To earn a living because jobs are scarce 57.4 36
Fear of failure (opportunity) 50.2 13
Entrepreneurial intentions* 15.3 27
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.0 37 5.6 10.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 8.1 18 6.2 9.8
1.3 36= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 24.0 5 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 83.4 17 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 93.0 3 Pandemic has led household income to
24.9 44
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 35.7 7
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 21.9 47
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
52.4 25
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 48.5 21

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Slovenia
I. Social and 4.9 (14/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.6 (17/22)
3.9 (18/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.4 (15/22) 6
4.4 (15/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.6 (19/22) 4.3 (20/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
6.0 (5/22) 5.8 (12/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.4 (17/22) 3.0 (15/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.1 (18/22) 4.6 (18/22) recorded in brackets

190 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Economic growth reached 5% in Slovenia in 2022, but Finance (14th of the 51 GEM economies), while the
was expected to slow in 2023. Employment continued lowest was 43rd for Social and Cultural Norms.
to increase, and unemployment fell, while inflation was
expected to touch 10% by the end of 2022.
Economic recovery from the pandemic has 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
combined with higher energy costs to push up prices, The percentage of adults in Slovenia reporting that the
although some of the effects on inflation have been pandemic reduced household income continues to fall:
mitigated by government actions to reduce taxes from 45% in 2020, to 34% a year later and to 25% in 2022.
on electricity and energy products. Entrepreneurs Under one in five adults intend to start a business in
face shortages of labour, putting upward pressure on the next three years. While this share had fallen at the
wages. Confidence indicators have declined following onset of the pandemic, it since recovered strongly, and
the war in Ukraine. was only slightly lower in 2022 than in 2019.
In March 2022, an amendment to the Investment More than half of adults in Slovenia knew an
Promotion Act came into effect to help businesses entrepreneur, or saw good opportunities to start a
adapt to the demands of the green transformation business locally, although half of the latter would be
without losing international competitiveness. The law deterred by fear of failure. Confidence in one’s own
also provides incentives for investment in research, abilities was high, with three out of five adults agreeing
development and innovation. they had the skills or experience to start a business
themselves.
Both the percentage of adults starting and running
2022 Framework Conditions Review
a new business, and of those running an established
Like its neighbours Croatia and Hungary, Slovenia business, fell slightly at the start of the pandemic but
has been gradually improving its entrepreneurial had largely recovered, the former from 7.8% in 2019
environment. While it still had a large number of and 6.0% in 2020 to 8.0% in 2022, and the latter from
Framework Conditions regarded by its national 8.5% in 2019 and 7.0% in 2020 to 8.1% in 2022. Men were
experts as insufficient (<5.0) (nine in 2022, the same more likely than women to be starting a business in
as in 2021), many of those conditions had moved a lot Slovenia in 2022, with around seven men starting a
closer to sufficiency by 2022. The ratings by national new business for every four women doing the same.
experts improved for 11 of the 13 Entrepreneurial Each of the three motives “to earn a living because
Framework Conditions in 2022, with one unchanged jobs are scarce”, “to build great wealth or very high
and one declining (Commercial and Professional income” and “to make a difference in the world”, were
Infrastructure, and not by much). In 2021, five agreed by just over half of all new entrepreneurs
conditions scored as much less than sufficient (>4.0). in Slovenia in 2022. Meanwhile, the share of new
By 2022 this fell to just two. The biggest improvements entrepreneurs with customers beyond Slovenia was
were for Ease of Access to Entrepreneurial Finance, both relatively high and rising: from one in three in
Entrepreneurial Education at School, Social and 2020 to just under one-half in 2022.
Cultural Norms and Government Entrepreneurial However, job expectations among new
Programs. entrepreneurs have been declining. In 2020, 30% of
One consequence of all these changes is that the those starting or running a new business had expected
overall National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) to employ another six people or more in five years’
score for Slovenia’s entrepreneurial environment time. One year later this had fallen to 22% and then
improved from 4.3 in 2021, when Slovenia had ranked fell further to 17% in 2022. More optimistically, more
32nd of the GEM economies, to 4.8 in 2022, or 23rd. For than a half of new entrepreneurs expect to use more
the individual Framework Conditions, Slovenia’s best digital technology to sell their products in the next six
rank in 2022 was for Ease of Access to Entrepreneurial months.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader SPIRIT Slovenia — Public Mediana


University of Maribor, Faculty of Prof. Karin Širec, PhD Agency for Entrepreneurship,
Economics and Business Internationalization, Foreign
Team members Investments and Technology Contact
Prof. Polona Tominc, PhD Slovenian Research Agency
[email protected]
Prof. Katja Crnogaj, PhD Institute for Entrepreneurship and
Small Business Management at
Prof. Barbara Bradač Hojnik, PhD
Faculty of Economics & Business,
Type of institution Matej Rus, MSc University of Maribor
University Prof. Emeritus Miroslav Rebernik, PhD

Website
https://www.um.si/en
https://www.epf.um.si/en/
https://ipmmp.um.si/
globalni-podjetniski-monitor/

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 191


ECONOMY PROFILE

South Africa
Q Population (2021): 60.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 14.4 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
33.6 45
business
To make a difference in the world 80.4 4
Good opportunities to start a business in my
61.3 20
area To build great wealth or very high income 80.8 6
It is easy to start a business 63.9 16 To continue a family tradition 49.2 6
Personally have the skills and knowledge 63.7 20 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 89.5 3
Fear of failure (opportunity) 59.4 2
Entrepreneurial intentions* 6.0 45
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
8.5 33 7.9 9.1
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 1.8 48 1.7 2.0
1.8 29 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 21.3 10= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 83.0 18 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 75.5 29 Pandemic has led household income to
63.7 14
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 7.9 40
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 57.8 9
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
45.1 35
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 58.9 9

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance South Africa
I. Social and 4.0 (6/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.8 (6/13)
4.5 (9/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.9 (9/13) 6
4.1 (8/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.6 (8/13) 3.9 (6/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.8 (8/13) 3.8 (7/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.6 (9/13) 3.6 (4/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.3 (5/13) 4.5 (7/13) recorded in brackets

192 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
GDP for the South African economy was expected 17% in 2021, before falling back to 8% in 2022. Similar
to grow by around 2% in 2022. This is too low to have volatility was seen in business intentions, with 12%
much impact on the national unemployment rate of of adults intending to start a business in the next
almost 33%, among the highest globally. three years in 2019, rising to 20% in 2021, then falling
Inflation was high at nearly 7% and the cost of back to 6% in 2022. EBO was 3.5% in 2019, went up to
borrowing was becoming prohibitive for many 5.2% in 2021, and then fell further to 1.8% in 2022. This
startups and growing businesses. The government entrepreneurial instability, of course, mirrors the wider
has approved the National Integrated Small economy. More than three in five South Africans report
Enterprise Development (NISED) strategic framework, that their household income has fallen in 2022 because
strengthening support for small and medium-sized of the pandemic.
enterprises Just over a third of South Africans know someone
who has recently started a business, while twice this
level consider they have the skills and experience to
2022 Framework Conditions Review run their own business. More than three in five see
South Africa showed year-on-year improvements good opportunities to start a business, although
on 10 of the 13 framework conditions, including more than half of these would be deterred by fear of
the three conditions directly dependent on failure.
government: Government Policy: Support and In South Africa, men are slightly more likely than
Relevance, Government Policy: Taxes and Bureaucracy women to be starting a new business, although the
and Government Entrepreneurial Programs. entrepreneurial gender gap remains small. However,
Just as importantly, both the level and access to job expectations continue to decline: in 2019 three in 10
entrepreneurial finance also improved. As a result, of those starting or running a new business expected
South Africa’s overall score for its entrepreneurial to employ another six or more people in the next five
environment in the National Entrepreneurship years, but by 2022 this share had fallen to just two in
Context Index (NECI) increased from 3.7 in 2021 to 4.1 10. Not surprisingly, earning a living because jobs are
in 2022, lifting it from 45th to 40th overall. However, scarce continues to be the dominant agreed motive
South Africa was just one of three economies in in an economy in which 97% of new businesses have
2022, alongside Togo and Tunisia, with all Framework local customers, although almost a quarter also have
Conditions scored as insufficient (<5.0), although, customers outside of South Africa, up from less than a
in the case of South Africa, at least two (Physical fifth in 2021.
Infrastructure and Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics) are More than four out of five new entrepreneurs in
edging closer to sufficiency. South Africa agreed with the motivation to start
a business in order “to earn a living because jobs
are scarce”, while almost as many agreed with the
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review motivations “to make a difference in the world” and
“to build great wealth or very high income”. Clearly, for
The early stages of the pandemic saw a substantial South African entrepreneurs, these motivations are not
increase in the proportion of adults starting or running exclusive.
a new business in South Africa, up from 11% in 2019 to

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Stellenbosch Business School NielsenIQ South Africa
Stellenbosch University Angus Bowmaker-Falconer Small Enterprise Development
Agency (Seda)
Team members
Contact
Standard Bank of South Africa
Prof. Marius Ungerer Limited [email protected]
Prof. Natanya Meyer
Dr. Mike Herrington
Type of institution
University

Website
http://www.sun.ac.za/

Other institutions involved


University of Johannesburg

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 193


ECONOMY PROFILE

Spain
Q Population (2021): 47.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 40.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
41.3 39=
business
To make a difference in the world 39.3 34
Good opportunities to start a business in my
26.0 48
area To build great wealth or very high income 39.1 45
It is easy to start a business 32.2 41 To continue a family tradition 21.4 41
Personally have the skills and knowledge 46.5 42 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 70.6 20
Fear of failure (opportunity) 50.9 10=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 8.3 40=
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
6.0 44= 5.9 6.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 7.0 20 6.5 7.5
0.6 48 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 12.0 22 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 68.5 39 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 68.9 37 Pandemic has led household income to
40.2 29
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 38.5 5
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 53.1 14
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
46.5 30
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 40.3 28

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Spain
I. Social and 3.8 (21/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 3.9 (22/22)
3.3 (21/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
6.4 (16/22) 6
2.9 (22/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.1 (21/22) 3.3 (22/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.2 (17/22) 4.2 (19/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.2 (18/22) 2.8 (18/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.4 (22/22) 5.1 (11/22) recorded in brackets

194 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
In 2021, GDP in Spain grew by more than 5%, while sample size, even small changes in variables may be
employment growth was nearly 7%. Inflation was significant.
below the Eurozone average at 6.6%, increasing the The percentage of adults in Spain intending to start
competitiveness of startups in Spain. In 2022, the a business in the next three years fell slightly in the first
Spanish government approved new laws to support year of the pandemic and has been rising steadily since
business creation and growth and to promote the then, although the level in 2022 (8.3%), was half of its
startup ecosystem. largest neighbour, France. This is despite the collapse
in the entrepreneurial environment outlined above.
Two out of five adults in Spain consider they have the
2022 Framework Conditions Review skills and experience to start a business, with a similar
In 2021 the overall entrepreneurial environment in proportion knowing someone who had already done
Spain, as measured by the National Entrepreneurship so. However, just one in four see good opportunities to
Context Index (NECI), had scored 5.4, placing it 10th start a business locally, while more than half of these
out of 47 economies, with 10 Framework Conditions would be deterred from doing so by the fear of failure.
scored as sufficient or better (≥5.0) and just three The upshot of all this was that just 6% of adults
as insufficient (and two of those were very close to in Spain were starting or running a new business in
sufficient). Just one year later, the entrepreneurial 2022, a proportion that has hardly changed in the
environment in Spain had suffered a cataclysmic past five years. There was hardly any entrepreneurial
collapse, leaving it with a score of 4.0 and a rank of gender gap in Spain in 2022, with proportions of men
41st of 51 economies. Ten Framework Conditions were and women starting new businesses virtually the
assessed as insufficient and just three as sufficient or same. However, this is significantly less than France
better. next door. The level of EBO in Spain has also proved
All of Spain’s Framework Condition scores in 2022 remarkably stable at 7% in 2022, slightly higher than
were lower compared to 2021, with falls in scores for the pre-pandemic level of 6.3% in 2019 (and more than
Government Policy: Support and Relevance (5.4 to 2.9), twice the level of its neighbour!).
Government Entrepreneurial Programs (6.3 to 4.2), Nearly two in five adults in Spain reported that their
Research and Development Transfers (5.6 to 3.4) and household income had fallen due to the pandemic.
Government Policy: Taxes and Bureaucracy (5.1 to 3.3). Since that pandemic started, “to earn a living because
Urgent action to support new businesses is jobs are scarce” has been by far the dominant motive,
required if further falls are to be prevented. A new legal agreed by seven out of 10 new entrepreneurs, almost
framework that supports startup creation has been twice the level of agreement of the next highest
developed in 2022, which includes measures to reduce motive (“to build great wealth or very high income”).
entry costs and favour the attraction of personnel Two in five entrepreneurs agreed with the motive “to
and foreign investment. These measures come into make a difference in the world”, and just one in five
effect in 2023 and should improve perceptions of the with “to continue a family tradition”.
entrepreneurial environment in Spain. Despite its relatively low level, starting or running a
new business in Spain offers considerable potential in
terms of impact. Almost a third of new entrepreneurs
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review had customers outside of Spain, while nearly a half
expected to use more digital technologies in the
Spain continues to have the largest Adult Population next six months to sell their products, a much higher
Survey (APS) sample size of any GEM participating proportion than in France. However just one in 10
economy, allowing its national and regional teams to new entrepreneurs expected to employ six or more
conduct analysis at a fine level of detail. Because of this additional people in the next five years.

Institution Regional teams GEM Islas Baleares; Rosa María Mª del Mar Fuentes Fuentes, PhD
Batista Canino, Phd, Director GEM Ignacio Mira Solves, PhD
Lead institution José Ruiz Navarro, Phd, Director Islas Canarias; Luis Ruano Marrón,
Phd, Director GEM La Rioja; Miguel María Saiz Santos, PhD
Observatorio del Emprendimiento de GEM Andalucía; Lucio Fuentelsaz
Lamata, PhD, Co-Director GEM Angoitia Grijalba, Phd, Director GEM Paula San Martín Espina, PhD
España (OEE) Madrid; Mª del Mar Fuentes Fuentes,
Aragón; Consuelo González Gil, PhD,
Co-Director GEM Aragón; Manuel Phd, Director GEM Melilla; Alicia
Rubio Bañón, Phd, Director GEM Funders
González Díaz, Phd, Director GEM
Asturias; Ana Fernández Laviada, Murcia; Ignacio Contín Pilart, Phd,
Phd, Director GEM Cantabria; Juan Co-Director GEM Navarra; Martín ENISA (Ministry of Industry,
José Jiménez Moreno, Phd, Director Larraza Quintana, Phd, Co-Director Commerce and Tourism)
Type of institution
GEM Castilla La Mancha; Nuria GEM Navarra; María Saiz Santos, Phd,
Non Profit Organisation González Álvarez, Phd, Director GEM Director GEM País Vasco
APS vendor
Website Castilla y León; Carlos Guallarte
Núñez, Phd, Director GEM Cataluña;
http://www.gem-spain.com Gabriel García-Parada Arias, Phd,
National team Opinometre
Director GEM Ceuta; José María
Team leader
Gómez Gras, Phd, Director GEM Contact
Comunidad Valenciana; Antonio Ana Fernández Laviada, PhD
Fernández Portillo, Phd, Director [email protected]
GEM Extremadura; Loreto Fernández National team members
Fernández, Phd, Director GEM Galicia; [email protected]
Nuria Calvo Babío, PhD
Julio Batle Lorente, Phd, Director

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 195


ECONOMY PROFILE

Sweden
Q Population (2021): 10.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 59.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
53.8 24
business
To make a difference in the world 44.0 29
Good opportunities to start a business in my
76.7 5
area To build great wealth or very high income 52.1 29
It is easy to start a business 79.8 4 To continue a family tradition 16.3 46
Personally have the skills and knowledge 49.4 38 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 24.9 49
Fear of failure (opportunity) 41.5 33
Entrepreneurial intentions* 13.7 32
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
9.1 30= 7.1 11.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 4.8 35 3.4 6.1
1.3 36= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 19.4 13 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 60.0 45 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 60.8 44 Pandemic has led household income to
22.0 47
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 33.1 12
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 23.7 46
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
36.5 41
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 33.4 37

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Sweden
I. Social and 5.8 (6/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.2 (9/22)
5.3 (12/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.1 (10/22) 6
4.1 (19/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.4 (20/22) 4.9 (15/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.4 (10/22) 4.7 (17/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.6 (14/22) 4.5 (9/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.3 (15/22) 4.1 (21/22) recorded in brackets

196 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The Swedish economy is estimated to have grown 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
by about 3% in 2022, although high inflation (8%),
Around one in eight adults in Sweden invested in
higher interest rates and increased pessimism
someone else’s new business in 2022, a proportion
among households and firms were expected to lead
that has been both relatively high and relatively stable
to a slowdown in 2023. Inflation has led to higher
over the past few years. However, the proportion of
interest rates, reducing demand and creating a more
adults intending to start a business fell at the start of
challenging climate for both new and established
the pandemic (from 15% in 2019 to 11% in 2020), but
businesses.
has since recovered, reaching 15% in 2021 but 14% in
Favourable tax rules for employee stock options
2022. Swedish women remain less likely to be starting
have been extended to young growth companies to
a new business than Swedish men, although the
help them to recruit and retain staff.
gender gap has narrowed in recent years as female
entrepreneurship has risen faster than male. EBO
2022 Framework Conditions Review actually increased at the start of the pandemic, but has
subsequently stabilized at 4.8%, more or less what it
In recent years Sweden had improved its was before the pandemic.
entrepreneurial environment, having had an overall In 2022 more than half of Swedish adults knew
National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI) score someone who has started a business recently, with
for the quality of that environment of 4.5 (less than a similar proportion agreeing they have the skills
sufficient; <5.0) in 2020, ranked 23rd, and then rising and experience to do so. A relatively high proportion
to a well-sufficient score of 5.3 (12th) in 2021. This (more three in four) saw good opportunities to start a
momentum faltered in 2022, with eight Framework business locally, although nearly half of these would be
Condition scores being lower than a year earlier, deterred by fear of failure.
reducing Sweden’s overall score to 5.0, or to just “To build great wealth or very high income” has
sufficient, with a ranking of 19th. The largest fall been the most commonly chosen motivation of new
was in Commercial and Professional Infrastructure; entrepreneurs since this question was introduced by
followed by Research and Development Transfers; GEM in 2019, while the proportions agreeing with the
Entrepreneurial Finance; and Government Policy: motivation of “to continue a family tradition” or “to
Support and Relevance. For an economy ranked earn a living because jobs are scarce” have both fallen
among the top 10 in terms of average incomes, continuously since then.
resources should not be an issue. The pandemic may have encouraged new
Take Entrepreneurial Education Post-School, for entrepreneurs to focus more on local markets. The
example. The score for this Framework Condition proportion with customers outside of the country
in 2022 was 4.1, down from a year earlier, and much declined from 46% in 2019 to 30% in 2021, before
less than sufficient. However, other economies have some slight recovery in 2022 (to 36%). This may have
invested in and improved their post-school education, influenced more than a third of new entrepreneurs
so that Sweden’s relative position in terms of physical who expected to use more digital technology to sell
infrastructure fell to 41st of the 51 economies in 2022, their products in the next six months. Optimistically,
having been 22nd just three years earlier. the proportion of new entrepreneurs expecting to
Sweden did score relatively highly in the new employ six or more additional people in five years
questions about COVID recovery, a result consistent stood at 15% in 2022, up sharply from just 9% a year
with its improving Framework Condition score for earlier.
market dynamics. But there is clearly much work to
do elsewhere in improving Sweden’s entrepreneurial
environment to a level compatible with her Level A
status.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Confederation of Swedish Enterprise Norstat


Swedish Entrepreneurship Forum Per Thulin Triton Advisers Sweden
(Entreprenörskapsforum) Contact
Team members
Marcus Kardelo marcus.kardelo@
Martin Svensson entreprenorskapsforum.se
Anders Broström
Type of institution
Frans Prenkert
Research Institute

Website
https://entreprenorskapsforum.se

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 197


ECONOMY PROFILE

Switzerland
Q Population (2021): 8.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 77.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
52.1 27
business
To make a difference in the world 57.4 14
Good opportunities to start a business in my
47.0 34
area To build great wealth or very high income 37.1 47
It is easy to start a business 66.5 12 To continue a family tradition 11.2 48
Personally have the skills and knowledge 47.6 41 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 47.1 40
Fear of failure (opportunity) 32.3 47
Entrepreneurial intentions* 10.5 37
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
7.4 38 6.3 8.4
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 8.2 17 8.0 8.4
0.8 46 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 14.8 17 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 71.4 31= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 75.3 30 Pandemic has led household income to
22.9 46
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 38.4 6
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 28.8 42
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
31.9 45
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 36.4 32

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Switzerland
I. Social and 6.4 (3/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.6 (4/22)
5.5 (10/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.8 (1/22) 6
5.5 (8/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.8 (5/22) 6.2 (3/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
3.8 (18/22) 6.5 (5/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.7 (2/22) 3.6 (11/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
6.0 (3/22) 5.7 (6/22) recorded in brackets

198 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Swiss GDP grew very little in the second and third 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
quarters of 2022 (0.2% and 0.1% respectively). The
Like its similarly high-income neighbours Austria,
services sector drove the little growth there was.
France and Germany (but not Italy), Switzerland has a
So far, Switzerland has avoided high inflation, with
reputation for high levels of quality entrepreneurship.
consumer prices rising around 3% in 2022. However,
However, that reputation may be at risk, with the
some entrepreneurship has been impacted by the
percentage of adults starting or running a new
rising costs of imported goods and services. In 2022,
business in Switzerland falling in 2022 to 7.4%,
the Swiss Innovation Agency launched “Innosuisse”, an
down from 9.8% a year earlier, which in turn had
initiative to support science-based innovation projects
been comparable to the pre-pandemic level of
with significant market potential.
2019. However the level of EBO, which had fallen
precipitously at the start of the pandemic (from 12% in
2022 Framework Conditions Review 2019 to 7% in 2020), continues to recover, reaching just
over 8% in 2022.
In pre-pandemic 2019, Switzerland topped the then Just over one in ten Swiss adults intend to start
new league table of entrepreneurial framework overall a business in the next three years, nearly back to
scores in the National Entrepreneurship Context Index pre-pandemic levels, while one in 10 are investing
(NECI) with a score of 6.1. The pandemic period saw in someone else’s new business. More than half
some deterioration in that score to 5.4 (10th) in 2020, of Swiss adults know someone who has recently
and to 5.5 in 2021 (ninth). But 2022 marked something started a business, with only slightly less seeing good
of a recovery in Switzerland’s overall score: to 5.8. opportunities to start a business locally, or considering
Improvements in the entrepreneurial environment they have the skills and experience to be able to do so.
scores of other economies, however, meant that Less than a third of those seeing good opportunities
Switzerland only ranked eighth of the 51 GEM would be deterred by fear of failure.
economies in 2022. “To make a difference in the world” remains the
In the 2021–2022 period, Switzerland increased most agreed motivation for new Swiss entrepreneurs,
its scores in nine Framework Conditions, with as it has been since these questions were introduced
Entrepreneurial Education Post-School accounting by GEM in 2019, apart from the immediate aftermath
for the largest increase. However, despite a creditable of the pandemic (2020), when it was temporarily
COVID recovery score of 6.5, well sufficient and 10th overtaken by “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”.
of 51 economies, Switzerland continues to have In 2022, almost three in five new Swiss entrepreneurs
its overall score dragged down by poor scores for agreed with the motivation “to make a difference in
Entrepreneurial Education at School and for Ease the world”.
of Entry: Market Dynamics. In the latter Framework While one in three new entrepreneurs expected
Condition, Switzerland ranked 45th of 51 economies, to use more digital technology to sell their products
in stark contrast to the 10 Framework Conditions in the next six months, just one in 10 of those new
for which it ranked 10th or better. In an economy in entrepreneurs were expecting to employ another six or
which six Framework Conditions scored 6 or more, more people in five years’ time.
scoring 3.8 for Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics and
3.6 for Entrepreneurial Education at School is both
problematic and inconsistent.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader School of Management Fribourg Gfs Bern


School of Management Fribourg Prof. Rico Baldegger, PhD (HEG-FR)
(HEG-FR) University of Applied Sciences and
Team members
Contact
Arts of Western Switzerland (HES-SO)
Assoc. Prof. Raphael Gaudart [email protected]
Assoc. Prof. Pascal Wild
Gabriel Simonet, MSc BA
Type of institution
Lucia Zurkinden, MSc BA
Business School

Website
https://www.heg-fr.ch/en

Other institutions involved


Swiss Start-up Factory
Swiss Economic Forum
Impact Hub Switzerland

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 199


ECONOMY PROFILE

Taiwan
Q Population (2021): 23.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
29.0 47
business
To make a difference in the world 53.6 18
Good opportunities to start a business in my
46.8 35=
area To build great wealth or very high income 49.5 31
It is easy to start a business 40.5 33 To continue a family tradition 24.0 33=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 39.9 45 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 30.8 46
Fear of failure (opportunity) 42.9 30=
Entrepreneurial intentions* 15.2 28
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
5.6 46 4.3 6.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 9.0 12= 5.0 13.0
2.1 26= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 8.6 28 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 90.9 2= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 87.4 10 Pandemic has led household income to
44.2 27
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 13.6 34=
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 39.5 29
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
57.8 16
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 41.9 27

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Taiwan
I. Social and 5.9 (1/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 5.4 (1/16)
6.7 (1/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
8.4 (1/16) 6
6.6 (1/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
5.2 (2/16) 7.1 (1/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.9 (5/16) 6.6 (1/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.9 (1/16) 4.3 (2/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
5.8 (1/16) 5.9 (1/16) recorded in brackets

200 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
Inflation has impacted the global economy and this Taxes and Bureaucracy, Commercial and Professional
is certainly the case for Taiwan. GDP growth in the Infrastructure, and Physical Infrastructure. The biggest
economy has slowed to 3%, lower than earlier forecasts. improvement since 2020 was for Government Policy:
The consumer price index edged up to about 3%, while Taxes and Bureaucracy. If Taiwan can approach
unemployment remains low at 3.6%. improving entrepreneurial education in schools
Entrepreneurs in Taiwan have become more with the same commitment given to improving
cautious due to rising prices. Nevertheless, the level of government entrepreneurial policy, then quality could
incubation activities remain quite high, demonstrating permeate its entire entrepreneurial landscape.
that many individuals are proactively looking for
opportunities to take the next step in starting a
business. 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
Just over two in five Taiwanese adults reported that
their household income in 2022 was lower because
2022 Framework Conditions Review
of the pandemic, up slightly from two years earlier.
It is easy for governments to argue that they don’t have The percentage of adults investing in someone else’s
enough resources to afford an excellent environment new business was both low and stable, at around 6%,
for entrepreneurship. It certainly is the case that possibly because high-quality entrepreneurial finance
some rich economies have invested heavily in their is available elsewhere in Taiwan. Business intentions are
entrepreneurial environments in recent years and have also stable and relatively modest around 15% since 2019.
seen their environments improve. But it is also the case Less than three in 10 adults in Taiwan in 2022 knew
that some relatively low- or middle-income economies someone who had recently started their own business,
have achieved excellence in their environments, and down slightly from one in three in 2020. Almost two in
this Global Report outlines two obvious examples: five adults agreed they have the skills and experience
Taiwan and India. High-income economies with to start their own business, and nearly half saw good
governments that have presided over sharp declines opportunities to do so locally, although two in five of
in their entrepreneurial environments, including Spain these would be deterred by the fear of failure.
and Italy, may care to take note. The quality of their The rate of adults starting or running a new
entrepreneurial environment is as much about choice business was stable at 8.4% in both 2019 and 2020, but
as it is about resources. had since fallen to 5.6% in 2022. Men were more likely
In 2022, the quality of the entrepreneurial than women to start a new business in Taiwan, with
environment in Level B Taiwan was assessed by its around three new businesses started by men for every
national experts, in terms of National Entrepreneurship two started by women. EBO has followed a similar
Context Index (NECI) score, at 6.2, third among the 51 pattern to new starts, falling from 12.8% in 2019 to 9%
GEM economies, just as it had been two years earlier in 2022. So, in Taiwan, the proportion of adults starting
with a NECI score of 6.1. Taiwan did not participate or running a new business was about two-thirds of the
in the GEM National Expert Survey (NES) in 2021, so proportion running an established business.
comparisons will be made with results for 2020. In both “To make a difference in the world” was the most
2020 and 2022, the only Framework Condition scoring commonly agreed motivation for new entrepreneurs in
as insufficient (<5.0) was Entrepreneurial Education Taiwan, at just over one in two, closely followed by “to
at School, with the score actually dipping between build great wealth or very high income”, at just under
the two years. However, entrepreneurship courses one in two. The proportion of new entrepreneurs with
and programs were only recently added into tertiary customers beyond Taiwan was 27% in 2022, back to the
education in Taiwan in recent years, and the effects of pre-pandemic level of 2018, but below the level of 2020.
this will take time. More than half of new entrepreneurs in Taiwan
On all other Framework Conditions, Taiwan scored expected, in the next six months, to use more digital
sufficiently, and usually as much better than this. technology to sell their products, and job expectations
In 2022, Taiwan had 10 of its Framework Conditions were strong, with more than one in three expecting to
scored among the top 10 of the 51 GEM economies, employ an additional six people or more in five years’
with three conditions ranked first: Government Policy: time, up from one in four in 2020.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Small and Medium Enterprise China Credit Information Service, Ltd
Taiwan Institute of Economic Xin-Wu Lin Administration, Ministry of Economic (CRIF_CCIS)
Research (TIER) Affairs of Taiwan
Team members
Contact
Jia-Jing Lin
Hsiang-Chih Hwang [email protected]
Type of institution
Research Institute

Website
https://english.tier.org.tw/

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 201


ECONOMY PROFILE

Togo
Q Population (2021): 8.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 2.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
58.9 18
business
To make a difference in the world 52.4 20
Good opportunities to start a business in my
77.2 4
area To build great wealth or very high income 83.3 3
It is easy to start a business 54.3 20 To continue a family tradition 30.3 22
Personally have the skills and knowledge 87.5 2 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 81.3 12
Fear of failure (opportunity) 40.6 37
Entrepreneurial intentions* 52.3 3
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
24.1 7 25.4 22.6
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 18.0 2 18.9 17.0
4.0 13= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 9.1 27 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 75.4 24 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 70.4 35 Pandemic has led household income to
88.0 1
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 3.3 48
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 75.4 2
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
32.4 44
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 18.1 47

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Togo
I. Social and 2.7 (12/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 2.8 (12/13)
4.0 (12/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.3 (12/13) 6
4.7 (5/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.4 (10/13) 4.3 (5/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.1 (12/13) 4.6 (5/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.1 (11/13) 1.5 (13/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.6 (11/13) 3.6 (12/13) recorded in brackets

202 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The economy of Togo has been recovering strongly 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
after the pandemic, with GDP forecast to have risen
Around nine in 10 adults in Togo reported that their
by about 6% in 2022. Although inflation increased
household income reduced due to the pandemic
to around 9%, unemployment has remained stable,
in 2022, the highest level in all GEM participating
suggesting some economic resilience. However, the
economies. Possibly because of this, or perhaps
costs of business essentials have been increasing even
reflecting poor access to alternative entrepreneurial
faster, with a 13% increase in water, gas, electricity and
funding, around one in eight Togolese adults invested
other fuel prices, and a 17% increase in transport costs
in someone else’s new business in both 2020 and 2022.
(both to November 2022).
Entrepreneurial self-confidence was sky-high
The government has acted to support businesses,
in Togo in 2022, with almost nine out of 10 adults
with measures including rescheduling credit
considering themselves to have the skills and
payments, reducing the tax burden on business,
experience to start their own business and over a half
exempting traders and artisans for market ticket taxes
of adults expecting to start their own business in the
and reducing interest rates for businesses borrowing
next three years. A similar proportion knew someone
from the National Fund for Inclusive Finance (FNFI).
who has started their own business recently. More
than three-quarters saw good opportunities to start
2022 Framework Conditions Review a business locally, although two in five of these would
not do so because of the fear of failure.
Togo last participated in GEM in 2020, so its In 2020, almost a third of adults in Togo (33%)
participation in 2022 allows some comparisons. In the were starting or running their own business. By
earlier year, the overall quality of Togo’s entrepreneurial 2022 this had fallen to just under a quarter (24.1%),
environment, as measured by the National with male entrepreneurship falling less than female
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI), scored 3.8, entrepreneurship. This means that both the relative
placing it 38th of the 44 participating economies. In and absolute entrepreneurial gender gaps in Togo had
2022, that NECI score fell to 3.6, placing Togo 49th of fallen: by 2022, there were 11 women starting a new
the 51 GEM participating economies. business in Togo for every 10 men doing the same. The
Between 2020 and 2022, all but one of Togo’s level of EBO has been much more stable at 18% in both
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions showed 2020 and 2022.
a change in quality assessment. Five conditions The two material motivations (“to build great wealth
improved, while six experienced declines. The biggest or very high income” and “to earn a living because
increase was for Social and Cultural Norms, although jobs are scarce”) had the highest levels of agreement
that increase was matched by equivalent falls in scores among new entrepreneurs in Togo, although one in
for both Commercial and Professional Infrastructure two also agreed with the “to make a difference i the
and for Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation. world” motive and one in three with “to continue a
The Togolese government is clearly trying to family tradition”. Many Togolese new entrepreneurs
make the best of its limited resources. Togo’s clearly have multiple motivations in starting their new
highest framework scores in 2022 were for the two businesses.
government policy conditions and for Government Around one-third of Togo’s new entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurial Programs. However, already low expected to use more digital technology in the next
scores for the two education conditions declined still six months to sell their products. Relatively few (16%)
further between 2020 and 2022, with Togo ranked as had customers beyond Togo, while a similar proportion
bottom of all 51 economies for the former and 48th for expected to employ another six or more people in five
the latter. years’ time.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Coalition Nationale Pour L’Emploi Des Centre autonome d’études et de
Coalition Nationale Pour L’Emploi Des Eric M. Tamandja Jeunes (CNEJ) renforcement des capacités pour le
Jeunes (CNEJ) développement au Togo (CADERDT)
Team members
Website Gnassingbe-E Odilia B. Contact
https://jeunestogolais.tg/ Kola Koboyo
Abalo-Koboyo Padakale [email protected]
Ayao Kokou-Maduvo
Korku Kofi Soweto
Abdel Adhime A. A. Salami
Junien Roxan Nze Biyoghe
Koulalo Kodjo
Amewokunu Yao A.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 203


ECONOMY PROFILE

Tunisia
Q Population (2021): 11.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 11.6 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
66.6 7
business
To make a difference in the world 31.8 40
Good opportunities to start a business in my
61.8 18
area To build great wealth or very high income 56.2 26
It is easy to start a business 44.7 30 To continue a family tradition 33.3 17
Personally have the skills and knowledge 78.6 4 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 89.7 2
Fear of failure (opportunity) 42.6 32
Entrepreneurial intentions* 50.7 4
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
17.1 12 14.7 19.7
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 10.0 8 5.0 15.1
3.7 15 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 6.4 32 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 86.2 10 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 88.3 8 Pandemic has led household income to
68.5 10
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 6.9 42
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 65.2 5
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
45.9 33
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 20.4 45

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Tunisia
I. Social and 3.5 (9/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.3 (10/13)
3.7 (13/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.9 (11/13) 6
3.6 (9/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
3.5 (9/13) 3.8 (7/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
4.3 (11/13) 3.8 (8/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
4.7 (7/13) 2.0 (8/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
3.4 (4/13) 4.0 (10/13) recorded in brackets

204 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The economy in Tunisia was going through a critical 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
period in 2022, with existing structural problems
Two out of three adults in Tunisia reported that the
aggravated by the aftermath of the pandemic and
pandemic had reduced their household income in
the consequences of the war in Ukraine. In the year
2022, a high rate but middle-ranking among the GEM
to Q3 2022, GDP grew by nearly 3%, inflation reached
Level C economies. However, the proportion of adults
almost 10% and the unemployment rate exceeded 15%.
investing in someone else’s new business was relatively
Inflation has hindered entrepreneurial intentions by
high at one in seven, perhaps reflecting the paucity of
raising costs, especially raw materials and borrowing
entrepreneurial finance.
costs.
There was good awareness of entrepreneurship in
In 2022, the government published three decrees
Tunisia, with two out of three adults knowing someone
regulating laws on crowdfunding, while the Ministry
who had recently started their own business. Three in
of Employment organized a national “Your Project”
four considered they have the skills and experience
competition.
to start a business. The proportion who saw good
opportunities to start a business locally was a little
2022 Framework Conditions Review lower at three in five, although nearly half of these
would be deterred by fear of failure.
The collective judgement of national experts in Tunisia The percentage of adults actually starting or
was that the quality of the overall entrepreneurial running a new business in Tunisia in 2022 was 17%,
environment was poor in 2022, deriving a score of 3.7 in although higher for men (20%) than for women (15%).
the National Entrepreneurial Context Index (NECI), well Hence there were four men starting or running a new
below sufficient (<5.0). This ranked Tunisia 47th of the business for every three women doing the same. The
51 economies participating in the GEM National Expert percentage of adults running an established business
Survey (NES). None of the 13 individual conditions was relatively high at 10%, so there were less than two
was rated as sufficient (≥5.0), although its Physical adults starting a new business for every adult running
Infrastructure and Commercial and Professional an established one, a healthy ratio that suggests that,
Infrastructure came closest. Ten of the Entrepreneurial despite the generally unsupportive entrepreneurial
Framework Conditions were poor. Tunisia had eight environment, many new businesses are surviving long
Framework Conditions ranked in the bottom 10 among enough to become established. This may be helped by
the GEM economies, with its highest ranks being for the fact that only a half of new businesses in Tunisia
government policy, ranked 38th. were in consumer services, a sector that typically has
So there is much to do to improve the lower chances of survival.
entrepreneurial environment in Tunisia. A good place Not surprisingly, “to earn a living because jobs
to start might be entrepreneurial education in schools, are scarce” was agreed as a motivation by nine in 10
rated lowest of the Framework Conditions, although new entrepreneurs, with “to make a difference in the
investment here takes a long time to bear fruit. A faster world” agreed by less than one in three. However, job
return may come from investment in entrepreneurial expectations were relatively strong, with one in five
finance, a significant obstacle to starting or developing expecting to employ an additional six people or more
a new business in Tunisia. in five years’ time. Conversely, one in three of those
starting or running a new business expected to employ
no new people in that period.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader The Arab Institute of Business Leaders IACE
The Arab Institute of Business Leaders Majdi Hassen IACE
IACE Expertise France
Team members
Contact
Hajer Karaa [email protected]
Manara Toukabri [email protected]
Moez Labidi
Kamel Ghazouani
Mokhtar Kouki
Type of institution
Institute

Website
https://iace.tn/

Other institutions involved


Expertise France

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 205


ECONOMY PROFILE

United Arab Emirates


Q Population (2021): 9.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 66.8 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
60.1 14
business
To make a difference in the world 54.8 17
Good opportunities to start a business in my
72.2 10
area To build great wealth or very high income 69.5 15
It is easy to start a business 77.2 7 To continue a family tradition 34.4 16
Personally have the skills and knowledge 71.7 10 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 65.3 27
Fear of failure (opportunity) 39.2 38
Entrepreneurial intentions* 44.5 8
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
25.5 6 19.7 28.0
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 4.5 36 3.1 5.1
19.6 1 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 35.6 1 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 90.2 4= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 90.0 7 Pandemic has led household income to
66.2 12
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 19.5 26=
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 25.7 44
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
81.9 2
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 50.2 19

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance United Arab Emirates
I. Social and 7.2 (1/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 7.2 (1/22)
7.9 (1/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.7 (4/22) 6
7.5 (1/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
6.6 (2/22) 6.9 (1/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.2 (3/22) 7.0 (2/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.8 (1/22) 7.1 (2/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
6.8 (1/22) 7.4 (1/22) recorded in brackets

206 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
2022 GDP growth in the United Arab Emirates was over 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
6%, with an average inflation rate of approximately 5%
The United Arab Emirates has not been immune
and unemployment rate a little below 4%.
to the impacts of the pandemic, with three in five
Inflation in the United Arab Emirates appears to
adults reporting that the pandemic had reduced their
be under control and entrepreneurs have been given
household income in 2022, a proportion little changed
opportunities to offset its impacts.
since this question was introduced in 2020. Perhaps as a
Entrepreneurship remains a high priority in the
consequence, the share of adults investing in someone
United Arab Emirates, with the recently launched
else’s new business declined in the early days of the
“Projects of the 50” targeting the next 50 years of
pandemic, from 10% in 2019 to 4% in 2020. However,
development there as it moves towards its 100th
this has largely recovered since, reaching 9% in 2022.
independence anniversary in 2071.
Similarly, business intention fell in those early days, from
half of all adults intending to start their own business
2022 Framework Conditions Review in the next three years, to one-third. This has also
recovered strongly, and was almost a half in 2022.
The quality of the entrepreneurial environment in Not surprisingly, many adults (three in five) in the
the United Arab Emirates has been on an upward United Arab Emirates knew someone who had started
trajectory in recent years, backed by high levels of their own business recently, while seven in 10 saw
investment and government commitment. In 2019, the good opportunities to start a business locally. However,
United Arab Emirates entrepreneurial environment and in what is a recurring theme in the United Arab
was assessed by its national experts to give a National Emirates, almost half would be deterred by fear of
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of 5.8, failure. New entrepreneurs are most motivated “to
ranking it fifth of GEM economies and well above build great wealth or very high income” and “to earn
regional comparators. This score improved in 2020 to a living because jobs are scarce”, although “to make a
6.0, still ranked fifth among GEM economies, and then difference in the world” was not far behind.
leapt forward to 6.8 in 2021 to become the most highly TEA fell slightly when the pandemic began, edged
rated of all GEM economies. In 2022, the NECI rank was back the following year, and has since surged ahead.
further improved to a score of 7.2, the highest achieved While it was one in six pre-pandemic, it reached one in
since the NECI was introduced in 2019 — just as the four adults in 2022. EBO, on the other hand, fell more
United Arab Emirates score of 6.8 had been the year sharply in the early days of the pandemic, from 7% in
before. 2019 to 2.5% in 2020. However, it recovered to 6.4% in
The United Arab Emirates is not confined to a 2021, but has dropped to 4.5% in 2022. This means the
few high scores in specific Framework Conditions. United Arab Emirates has gone from just over two new
In 2022, the UAE ranked first in seven of the 13 adults starting a new business for every one running
Framework Conditions, and second in five more. Its an established business, to a ratio of more than five to
lowest rank among the 51 GEM economies was fifth one in 2022. Converting these many new businesses
for Physical Infrastructure. Between 2021 and 2022, to become established will be a challenge, even within
the United Arab Emirates improved its scores in nine such a high-quality entrepreneurial environment.
Framework Conditions, with the largest increases Considering the types of businesses being launched,
for Entrepreneurial Finance and Entrepreneurial as with other entrepreneurial variables, the proportion
Education Post-School. Just two framework scores of international business (new entrepreneurs with
declined in 2022, with Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics customers beyond the United Arab Emirates) fell at
falling a little, and Government Policy: Taxes and the onset of the pandemic but has recovered strongly,
Bureaucracy by rather more. In addition, the United reaching more than one in two in 2022. Encouragingly,
Arab Emirates had the second highest score for the more than seven in 10 new entrepreneurs expected,
quality of its recovery from the economic impacts of in the next six months, to use more digital technology
the pandemic. to sell their products. As has become usual in the
United Arab Emirates, job creation expectations were
very strong, with three out of four new entrepreneurs
expecting to employ another six people or more in five
years’ time, rising from two out of three.

Institution Website Team members APS vendor


https://www.uaeu.ac.ae/en Chafik Bouhaddioui
Lead institution Kantar
https://gemuae.uaeu.ac.ae/en/ Llewellyn Thomas
United Arab Emirates University Elif Bascavusoglu-Moreau
(UAEU) Contact
Team
Funders [email protected]
Team leader
Teemu Kautonen United Arab Emirates University
(UAEU)
Type of institution
University

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 207


ECONOMY PROFILE

United Kingdom
Q Population (2021): 67.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 49.7 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
47.6 33
business
To make a difference in the world 51.9 21
Good opportunities to start a business in my
44.4 38
area To build great wealth or very high income 61.1 21
It is easy to start a business 65.9 13 To continue a family tradition 18.7 44
Personally have the skills and knowledge 53.5 32 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 60.6 30
Fear of failure (opportunity) 52.9 7
Entrepreneurial intentions* 10.9 36
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
12.9 18= 10.7 15.1
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.8 22= 4.3 9.4
2.5 23= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 13.0 21 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 74.4 25 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 73.3 33 Pandemic has led household income to
27.0 42
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 34.0 9
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 46.1 22
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
60.0 14=
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 57.0 10

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance United Kingdom
I. Social and 4.9 (13/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 4.1 (19/22)
5.1 (13/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
5.5 (19/22) 6
3.9 (20/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.6 (15/22) 5.3 (11/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.1 (13/22) 4.7 (16/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
5.7 (12/22) 3.2 (14/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.3 (16/22) 4.9 (15/22) recorded in brackets

208 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
After post-COVID expansion in 2021, the UK economy was rated as not sufficient (<5.0) in Research and
slowed in 2022, with real GDP 0.4% below its pre-COVID Development Transfers.
level in Q4 2019. Consumer price inflation reached
11% in October 2022. Higher input prices, especially
for energy, pushed some businesses to pass on price 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
increases to consumers, others to change suppliers, Over a quarter of adults in the United Kingdom
and some to scale down or consider closure. reported their household income had been
Late in 2021 the government launched a large-scale reduced by the pandemic in 2022. However, after
business support scheme “Help to Grow: Management”, falling in the initial aftermath of the pandemic
aimed at businesses with 5–249 employees, and (from 9.3% to 7.8%), the proportion of adults in
designed to enhance their leadership and management the United Kingdom starting or running a new
skills to enable future growth in productivity (https:// business had recovered strongly, reaching a level of
www.gov.uk/business-finance-support/help-to-grow- 12.9% in 2022, well above pre-pandemic levels. The
management-uk). The Rose Review, launched in level of female entrepreneurship had increased a
2018 by Dame Alison Rose (CEO, NatWest Group) and little more than male, so that the male-to-female
informed by GEM UK data, provides a sharp focus on the entrepreneurship ratio fell from 1.7 in 2019 to 1.4
challenges facing female entrepreneurs. in 2022. This was still a significant gender gap,
suggesting many women were missing out on
entrepreneurial opportunities.
2022 Framework Conditions Review
In 2022, just under half of all adults knew someone
In 2022, the United Kingdom ranked 25th in terms of who had recently started a new business, while slightly
its overall entrepreneurial environment with a National less saw good opportunities to start a business locally.
Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) score of 4.7, Well over half considered themselves to have the skills
pretty much in the middle of the 51 economies in the and experience to start that new business, although
GEM National Expert Survey (NES), having scored a small majority of those seeing good opportunities
4.9 and been ranked 19th just a year earlier. It is not to start a new business would be deterred by fear of
surprising that framework scores worsened over the failure.
year given chaotic trading conditions and supply chain Perhaps as a consequence of Brexit, the
blockages, as the implications of Brexit continued proportion of new entrepreneurs reporting they
to be multiplied by the aftermath of the pandemic had customers outside of the country fell between
and compounded by rising energy prices. In the 2021 and 2022 (from 39% to 26%). “To building
period 2021 to 2022, nine Framework Condition scores great wealth or very high income” was the most
worsened, led by Physical Infrastructure and Ease of commonly agreed motivation for starting a new
Entry: Burdens and Regulation, both directly related to business in 2022, closely followed by “to earn a living
the post-Brexit, post-pandemic turmoil. because jobs are scarce”. Nevertheless, “to make a
An economy once lauded for its world-leading difference in the world” was agreed by more than
financial markets was assessed as insufficient in both half of all new entrepreneurs.
the level of, and access to, entrepreneurial finance, A promising three out of five new entrepreneurs
alongside insufficient entrepreneurial education at all expected to use more digital technology to sell their
levels, and diminishing government policy support. An products in the next six months, with one in five
economy with two of the world’s top five universities1 expecting to employ another five or more people in
five years’ time.

1 World University Rankings 2022,


https://www.timeshighereducation.com

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Department for Business, Energy and BMG Ltd, Birmingham, UK
Aston Business School, Aston Prof. Mark Hart, PhD Industrial Strategy (BEIS)
University Welsh Government
Team members
Contact
British Business Bank
Professor Jonathan Levie [email protected]
Hunter Centre for Entrepreneurship,
Professor Tomasz Mickiewicz University of Strathclyde [email protected]
Professor Niels Bosma Invest Northern Ireland
Type of institution Wendy Ferris NatWest Group
University Dr Neha Prashar Department for the Economy in
Dr Karen Bonner Northern Ireland
Website
Dr Anastasia Ri
https://www.aston.ac.uk/research/bss/
Dr Samuel Mwaura
abs/research-in-action/gem
Dr Sreevas Sahasranamam
Other institutions involved Dr Andy Loung
Queen’s University Management
School, Queen’s University Belfast

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 209


ECONOMY PROFILE

United States
Q Population (2021): 331.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 69.3 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
55.6 21
business
To make a difference in the world 69.3 7
Good opportunities to start a business in my
46.0 37
area To build great wealth or very high income 70.8 14
It is easy to start a business 65.8 14 To continue a family tradition 36.5 14
Personally have the skills and knowledge 66.8 16 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 54.5 37
Fear of failure (opportunity) 43.1 28
Entrepreneurial intentions* 13.6 33
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
19.2 10= 18.1 20.3
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 9.2 11 7.9 10.5
4.7 11 Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 16.5 16 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 72.8 29 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 68.8 38= Pandemic has led household income to
32.9 34
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 22.3 22
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 53.3 13
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
56.6 17
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 50.4 18

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance United States
I. Social and 6.0 (5/22) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level A average
Cultural Norms (22 GEM economies;
10 5.0 (11/22)
7.0 (3/22) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.4 (6/22) 6
3.9 (21/22)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.9 (12/22) 4.8 (17/22)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
5.4 (9/22) 4.0 (21/22)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.4 (5/22) 3.5 (12/22) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.1 (17/22) 4.7 (17/22) recorded in brackets

210 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
The US economy remained unsettled, with the positive new business, especially for a Level A economy. Since
impact of a declining unemployment rate (5.9% in July 2018, despite the pandemic (or perhaps because of
2021 down to 3.5% in July 2022) being offset by first- it), the level of TEA has exceeded 15%, reaching more
and second-quarter contractions (GDP declined 1.6% than 19% in 2022. Meanwhile, the entrepreneurial
and 0.6% respectively), and the highest inflation rates gender gap (male TEA–female TEA) has been closing,
(8.5% or more) in 40 years. Such high inflation rates add from six percentage points in 2017 to just two in
uncertainty for entrepreneurs, as they must consider 2022.
the impact of price increases on everything from Although the peak of the pandemic appears to
customer demand to resource procurement. have passed, uncertainty about the future remains. For
example, a declining proportion of new entrepreneurs
expect to employ six or more people in five years’
2022 Framework Conditions Review time, from a third in 2019 to less than a quarter in
The United States continues to score high for 2022. More optimistically, there is keen awareness of
Physical Infrastructure and for Social and Cultural the nature of market change, with more than half
Norm, giving a favourable view of entrepreneurship, of new entrepreneurs expecting to use more digital
but also low in terms of government policy and technologies in the next six months.
programmes, Research and Development Transfers In 2022, the level of EBO was just over 9%,
and Entrepreneurial Education at School, each of implying around two new businesses started for
which scored as less than sufficient (<5.0). In terms every established business. More than half of US
of Research and Development Transfers, the United adults know someone who has started a business,
States ranked 25th of the 51 economies participating and self-confidence is high, with two out of three
in the National Expert Survey (NES) in 2022, and in the considering they have the knowledge and experience
bottom half of economies for all three government- to start their own business. However, two in five of
related conditions. As a result, the it ranked 15th in those seeing good opportunities would be deterred
terms of the overall entrepreneurial environment as by fear of failure. Around one in seven US adults
measured by the National Entrepreneurship Context intend to start a business in the next three years,
Index (NECI) score. More positively, that overall score a proportion that has fluctuated since 2020, after
has remained stable throughout the pandemic falling slightly at the start of the pandemic. “To build
period, with the United States scoring better than great wealth or very high income” and “to make a
sufficient on the new COVID recovery topic in the NES difference in the world” share the dominant position
questionnaire. among motivations, agreed by seven out of 10 US
entrepreneurs.
In 2022 there was a sharp rise in the proportion of
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review adults investing in someone else’s new business, up to
13% from 9% in 2021, reflecting post-COVID business
The United States has a reputation as a hub of opportunities, but also perhaps perceived low returns
entrepreneurship, perhaps justified by years of on other investments.
consistently high rates of adults starting or running a

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader Babson College Qualtrix


Babson College Jeff Shay, PhD
Prof. Donna Kelley, PhD Contact
Team members [email protected]
Prof. Mahdi Majbouri, PhD
Prof. Andrew Corbett, PhD
Prof. Candida Brush, PhD
Type of institution Prof. Caroline Daniels, PhD
Business School Smaiyra Million
Website Clare Currie
https://www.babson.edu

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 211


ECONOMY PROFILE

Uruguay
Q Population (2021): 3.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 24.6 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
61.3 13
business
To make a difference in the world 40.5 33
Good opportunities to start a business in my
58.2 23
area To build great wealth or very high income 46.2 38
It is easy to start a business 38.7 34 To continue a family tradition 27.2 27=
Personally have the skills and knowledge 69.1 13 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 65.4 26
Fear of failure (opportunity) 46.7 18
Entrepreneurial intentions* 32.7 13
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
26.3 5 23.9 28.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 6.4 25 4.5 8.4
6.4 6= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 4.4 37 COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 85.0 15 % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 87.3 11 Pandemic has led household income to
56.8 17=
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 16.1 31
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 33.5 36
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
60.0 14=
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 42.2 26

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Uruguay
I. Social and 3.4 (14/16) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level B average
Cultural Norms (16 GEM economies;
10 3.8 (11/16)
3.9 (13/16) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
7.3 (2/16) 6
3.8 (8/16)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.7 (7/16) 5.0 (5/16)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
2.0 (16/16) 5.9 (2/16)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
6.0 (3/16) 2.3 (12/16) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
4.2 (5/16) 5.8 (2/16) recorded in brackets

212 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
GDP in Uruguay increased by more than 5% in 2022, 2018, the percentage of adults in Uruguay intending
with inflation rising above 9% and unemployment to start a business in the next three years stood at
at almost 8%. Uruguay is a “dollarized” economy due 28%. In the early stages of the pandemic this rose to
to its historic high inflation, causing inefficiencies in 37%, subsequently declining to 33% in 2022. Similarly
inventory management. the percentage of adults investing in someone
The government introduced the “law of urgent else’s business also rose in those early days and has
consideration” giving tax benefits to small businesses continued to increase, reaching 7% in 2022.
to help offset the economic impacts of the pandemic. Adults in Uruguay do not lack confidence in their
own abilities. In 2022, seven out of 10 agreed they have
the skills and experience to start their own business.
2022 Framework Conditions Review Six out of 10 knew someone who had recently started a
In 2022 improvements were evident in the assessed business, and almost as many saw good opportunities
quality of 10 of Uruguay’s 13 individual Framework to start a new business locally, although, as in most
Conditions, which together pushed the overall economies, around a half of these would be deterred
assessment of its entrepreneurial environment in from starting that business by fear of failure.
the National Entrepreneurship Context Index (NECI) The percentage of adults starting or running their
score up from 4.3 in 2021 to 4.5 in 2022, edging its rank own business increased over the pandemic cycle,
among GEM economies from 31st to 30th. Despite from 16% in 2018 to 22% in 2020, and then up to 26% in
these improvements, Uruguay still has too many 2022. So the share of adults starting or running a new
(eight) conditions assessed as insufficient (<5.0), often business had risen from just one in six to more than
by a considerable margin. Much of the improvement one in four. Female rates have been increasing fastest:
since 2021 has been in conditions already scored as while the male rate increased by a half since 2018,
sufficient: in 2021, Uruguay had six conditions scored as the female rate has almost doubled over this period.
poor (<4.0) — and the same nmber in 2022. The proportion of adults running an established
Of particular concern is both the level of, and access business has been much more stable, falling slightly
to, entrepreneurial finance, each assessed as poor at the onset of the pandemic and then recovering.
in 2022. Finance is the lifeblood of the growing new By 2022, there were more than four new businesses
business: without it, both inception and growth can for every established business in Uruguay, raising
be very difficult. Other areas suggest a very mixed questions about what obstacles may be preventing
picture. For example, the score for Ease of Entry: new businesses from transitioning into established
Burdens and Regulation improved sharply, while that ones. Some of the answers may well be evident from
for Ease of Entry: Market Dynamics declined equally the review of Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions
sharply. At the same time three conditions that are the above.
direct responsibility of the government all improved: “To earn a living because jobs are scarce” remained
both government policy conditions and Government the most commonly agreed motive among new
Entrepreneurial Programs. entrepreneurs, although agreement with this had
So, while the improvements in 2022 are welcome, fallen from four out of five in 2020 to just under two
there is still much to do, particularly in addressing out of three in 2022. Meanwhile, “to make a difference
those conditions scored as very poor. Uruguay is a in the world” had increased in popularity, agreed by
Level B economy with big ambitions: continuing to three in 10 new entrepreneurs in Uruguay in 2020 and
improve its entrepreneurial environment is key to four in 10 in 2022.
realizing those ambitions. Just one in six new entrepreneurs had customers
beyond Uruguay, and three in five expected to use
more digital technology in the next six months to sell
2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review their products. Job expectations were strong, with one
in four of those starting or running a new business
The percentage of adults in Uruguay reporting that expecting to employ another six or more people in five
the pandemic has reduced their household income years’ time.
remains high at 56%, but is continuing to fall slowly. In

Institution Type of institution Team APS vendor


University
Lead institution Team leader Equipos Mori
Website
IEEM Business School, University of Professor Leonardo Veiga, PhD
Montevideo https://www.ieem.edu.uy/en
Team members
Contact
Gonzalo Avellanal [email protected]

Funders

ANDE
COUSA

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 213


ECONOMY PROFILE

Venezuela
Q Population (2021): 28.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 17.5 thousand (World Bank)

Attitudes and perceptions Motivational

% Adults Rank/49 (somewhat or strongly agree)


Know someone who has started a new % TEA Rank/49
37.8 43
business
To make a difference in the world 53.1 19
Good opportunities to start a business in my
63.7 15=
area To build great wealth or very high income 62.5 19
It is easy to start a business 52.6 22 To continue a family tradition 33.0 18
Personally have the skills and knowledge 83.2 3 To earn a living because jobs are scarce 89.9 1
Fear of failure (opportunity) 33.4 45
Entrepreneurial intentions* 29.4 15
Activity

% Adults Rank/49 % Female % Male


Entrepreneurship impact TEA (Total early-stage
15.9 15 15.0 16.9
Entrepreneurial Activity)
% Adults Rank/49
EBO (Established
Job expectations (expecting to employ six or 2.6 46= 2.7 2.4
2.1 26= Business Ownership)
more people in five years’ time)
% TEA Rank/49
International (25%+ revenue) 3.3 42= COVID-19 related
Always consider social impact 85.4 11= % Adults Rank/49
Always consider environmental impact 84.9 14 Pandemic has led household income to
78.6 2
decrease**
Industry (% TEA in business services) 4.9 45
% TEA Rank/49
Starting a business is more difficult than a
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with 41.3 25=
year ago
another economy or economies.
* Strictly, as noted on p. 46, through this Report this is the percentage Use more digital technology to sell products
70.6 8
of those adults not already engaged in entrepreneurial activity. or services
** Those reporting “somewhat decrease” or “strongly decrease”. Pursue new opportunities due to pandemic 51.0 16

EXPERT RATINGS OF THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS


A1. Entrepreneurial Finance Venezuela
I. Social and 1.9 (13/13) A2. Ease of Access
to Entrepreneurial Finance
Level C average
Cultural Norms (13 GEM economies;
10 3.5 (13/13)
4.9 (8/13) see Section 1.5 and Table 1.1)
9
8
H. Physical B1. Government Policy:
Infrastructure 7
Support and Relevance
4.0 (13/13) 6
2.1 (13/13)
5

4
3
G2. Ease of Entry: 2
B2. Government Policy:
Burdens and Regulation Taxes and Bureaucracy
1
4.3 (7/13) 1.7 (13/13)

G1. Ease of Entry: C. Government


Market Dynamics Entrepreneurial Programs
7.1 (1/13) 2.1 (13/13)

F. Commercial and D1. Entrepreneurial EFCs scale:


Professional Infrastructure Education at School 0 = very inadequate
3.8 (13/13) 1.9 (11/13) insufficient status,
E. Research and D2. Entrepreneurial 10 = very adequate
Development Transfers Education Post-School sufficient status. Rank
2.1 (13/13) 5.2 (5/13) recorded in brackets

214 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


POLICY ROADMAP
According to estimates by the Central Bank of 2022 Entrepreneurial Activity Review
Venezuela (BCV), GDP will have grown by nearly 19% in
Almost four out of five Venezuelan adults reported that
2022. Venezuela has one of the highest inflation rates
the pandemic had reduced their household income in
in the world, estimated at 125% in 2022.
2022, second highest of the GEM economies behind
Towards the end of 2021, the government published
Togo. Almost three in ten adults expected to start a
the Law for the Promotion and Development of New
business in the next three years.
Ventures to encourage new business creation and an
Only one in three adults knew someone who had
entrepreneurial culture. A “National Venture Fund” was
recently started a business, but confidence was high,
established, with seed capital of around $10 million,
with more than four out of five adults considering
as well as the Registro Nacional de Emprendimientos
themselves to have the skills and experience to be
(RNE).
able to start their own, second highest of the Level C
economies, again behind Togo. Almost two in three
2022 Framework Conditions Review saw good opportunities to start a business locally, and
only one-third of these would have been deterred from
In 2022, the National Entrepreneurial Context doing so by the fear of failure.
Index (NECI) score for Venezuela was 3.2, lowest The percentage of adults in Venezuela actually
of all 51 economies participating in the GEM starting or running a business in 2022 was almost
National Expert Survey (NES) that year. Of the 13 16%, although with slightly more men doing so than
Entrepreneurial Framework Conditions, Venezuela women. Seven out of 10 of those new businesses
was ranked last for six, and next to last for two were in consumer services, in the middle for a Level
more. If an individual framework score of less than C economy. The percentage of adults running an
three denotes very poor, then the Venezuelan established business was very low at less than 3%, joint
entrepreneurial environment was very poor for both third lowest with Egypt and behind South Africa and
entrepreneurial finance conditions, both government Mexico. The ratio of more than five people starting new
policy conditions, Government Entrepreneurial businesses for every person running an established
Programs, Entrepreneurial Education at School and business probably reflects the difficulties of keeping
for Research and Development Transfers. So both a new business viable long enough for it to become
the market and the government have been failing established. This ratio was only exceeded by Mexico
to provide a supportive or enabling environment among the 2022 GEM participants.
for entrepreneurship. Yet Venezuela also had two It is not surprising that nine out of 10 new
conditions rated as sufficient: Ease of Entry: Market entrepreneurs in Venezuela agreed with the
Dynamics and Entrepreneurial Education Post-School. motivation “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”.
So, overall, there is a poor entrepreneurial Rather more surprising is that six out of 10 agreed with
environment, but with some evidence that Venezuela the motive “to make a difference in the world”. Just
can get some Framework Conditions right. How that one in 10 of those new entrepreneurs had customers
entrepreneurial environment develops in the future is outside of Venezuela, although that may change, with
a matter of political commitment as well as resources. seven out of 10 agreeing that they expect to use more
The new Law and National Venture Fund may signal a digital technology to sell their products in the next six
positive direction for both. months. Finally, just one in eight of those starting or
running a new business in Venezuela expect to employ
another six or more people in five years’ time.

Institution Team Funders APS vendor

Lead institution Team leader IESA/UCAB N/A


IESA UCAB Edwin Ojeda
Aramís Rodríguez Contact
Team members [email protected]
Patricia Monteferrante [email protected]
Anitza Freites

Demetrio Marotta
Type of institution Federico Fernandez
University Maria Ponce

Website Jenifer Campos

https://www.iesa.edu.ve/ Susana Chu

ucab.edu.ve Gustavo Garcia


Luz Aimara Morales
Luis Lauriño

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 215


PART 3

Appendix
Tables
GEM Indicators
Knowing a Startup Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who personally know someone who
Entrepreneur has started a business in the past two years.

Perceived Opportunities Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who agree that they see good
opportunities to start a business within the next six months in the
area in which they live.
Ease of Starting a Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who agree that it is easy to start a
Business business in their country.

Perceived Capabilities Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who agree that they have the required
knowledge, skills and experience to start a business.
Fear of Failure Rate Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who agree that they see good
opportunities but would not start a business for fear it might fail.
Nascent Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are currently nascent
Entrepreneurship Rate entrepreneurs, i.e. are actively involved in setting up a business they
will own or co-own; this business has not yet paid salaries, wages or
made any other payments to the owners for more than three months.
New Business Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are currently owner-managers of
Ownership Rate a new business, i.e. who own and manage a running business that has
paid salaries, wages or made any other payments to the owners for
more than three months, but not more than 42 months (3.5 years).
Total early-stage Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are either a nascent
Entrepreneurial Activity entrepreneurs or owner-managers of a new business, i.e. the
(TEA) proportion of the adult population who are either starting or running
a new business.
Established Business Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are currently owner-managers of
Ownership Rate (EBO) an established business, i.e. who are owning and managing a running
business that has paid salaries, wages or made any other payments to
the owners for over 42 months (3.5 years).
Business Services Percentage of TEA respondents involved in business services.

Consumer Services Percentage of TEA respondents involved in consumer services.

Entrepreneurial Employee Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who, as employees, have been
Activity (EEA) involved in entrepreneurial activities such as developing or launching
new goods or services, or setting up a new business unit, a new
establishment, or a subsidiary in the last three years.
Sponsored Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are involved in TEA and that
business is part-owned with their employer.
Independent Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who are involved in TEA and that
business is independently owned.
Motive for Starting a Percentage of TEA respondents who agree that a reason for starting
Business: “To make a their business is “to make a difference in the world”.
difference in the world”

218 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Motive for Starting a Percentage of TEA respondents who agree that a reason for starting
Business: “To build great their business is “to build great wealth or a very high income”.
wealth or very high
income”

Motive for Starting a Percentage of TEA respondents who agree that a reason for starting
Business: “To continue a their business is “to continue a family tradition”.
family tradition”

Motive for Starting a Percentage of TEA respondents who agree that a reason for starting
Business: “To earn a living their business is “to earn a living because jobs are scarce”.
because jobs are scarce”

High Growth Expectation Percentage of adults aged 18–64 involved in TEA who expect to
Entrepreneurial Activity employ six or more people five years from now.

Internationally Oriented Percentage of adults aged 18–64 involved in TEA who anticipate 25%
Entrepreneurial Activity or more revenue coming from outside their country.

Scope (local/national/ Percentage of adults aged 18–64 involved in TEA having customers
international) only within their local area, only within their country, or those having
international customers.
Product/Services Impact Percentage adults aged 18–64 involved in TEA having products or
(local/national/global) services that are either new to the area, new to their country or new to
the world.
Technology/Procedures Percentage of adults aged 18–64 involved in TEA having technology or
Impact (local/national/ procedures that are either new to the area, new to their country or new
global) to the world.

Informal Investment Percentage of adults aged 18–64 investing in someone else’s new
business in the last three years.
Business Exit Rate Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who have exited a business in
the past 12 months, either by selling, shutting down or otherwise
discontinuing an owner/management relationship with that business.
Exit, Business Continues Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who have exited a business in the
past 12 months and that business has continued.
Exit, Business Does Not Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who have exited a business in the
Continue past 12 months and that business has not continued.

PANDEMIC-RELATED INDICATORS
Household Income Impact Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who consider that the pandemic has
led their household income to somewhat or strongly decrease.
Knowing an Entrepreneur Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who know someone who has stopped
Who Stopped a Business a business because of the pandemic.

Knowing an Entrepreneur Percentage of adults aged 18–64 who know someone who has started
Who Started a Business a business because of the pandemic.

Pandemic Opportunities Percentage of TEA respondents who agree or strongly agree that the
pandemic has provided new opportunities they wish to pursue.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 219


Table A1.  Impact of pandemic on household income in past year
(% of adults aged 18–64 )

Strongly Somewhat No substantial


decrease decrease change

Austria A 8.6 23.4 61.2

Brazil C 34.9 21.9 31.5

Canada A 11.7 21.8 50.4

Chile B 22.4 29.2 37.7

China C 19.5 54.2 24.6

Colombia C 32.5 40.5 17.7

Croatia B 5.6 13.7 32.1

Cyprus A 22.6 22.1 49.2

Egypt C 40.1 32.3 23.2

France A 11.1 21.3 58.6

Germany A 8.3 23.4 56.5

Greece B 28.7 29.4 40.4

Guatemala C 25.7 38.2 22.7

Hungary B 9.3 19.8 58.0

India C 33.5 40.4 20.3

Indonesia C 26.2 49.0 23.5

Iran C 14.7 35.1 44.6

Israel A 9.7 26.6 57.8

Japan A 5.8 20.0 67.0

Latvia B 11.5 16.9 59.7

Lithuania A 8.1 21.0 58.2

Luxembourg A 6.8 20.7 63.6

Mexico B 39.6 37.9 14.5

Morocco C 30.1 36.2 31.6

Netherlands A 6.4 17.2 65.9

Norway A 1.6 7.0 84.3

Oman B 16.4 29.1 52.6

Panama B 37.6 32.8 18.2

Poland B 17.1 43.7 30.1

Puerto Rico B 25.8 30.2 30.2

220 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Somewhat
increase Strongly increase

5.9 0.9

7.6 4.0

12.0 4.0

7.1 3.5

1.4 0.4

5.8 3.5

42.1 6.4

4.5 1.5

3.3 1.1

6.9 2.0

10.3 1.4

1.3 0.3

8.7 4.7

10.8 2.1

5.6 0.2

1.3 0.0

5.1 0.5

5.0 1.0

6.1 1.1

10.5 1.4

10.6 2.1

7.0 1.9

4.0 4.0

1.8 0.3

8.3 2.1

5.4 1.6

1.6 0.3

6.3 5.1

8.3 0.8

8.8 5.0

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 221


Table A1 (continued)

Strongly Somewhat No substantial


decrease decrease change

Qatar A 13.6 30.5 51.6

Republic of Korea A 0.7 34.3 49.3

Romania B 11.5 22.3 54.2

Saudi Arabia A 10.2 37.7 43.6

Serbia B 19.0 31.2 44.7

Slovak Republic B 21.3 35.3 37.2

Slovenia A 6.1 18.8 61.2

South Africa C 40.2 23.5 19.2

Spain A 14.7 25.5 54.6

Sweden A 5.5 16.5 61.0

Switzerland A 4.9 18.0 70.5

Taiwan B 18.2 26.0 53.9

Togo C 75.8 12.2 8.4

Tunisia C 40.8 27.7 29.9

United Arab Emirates A 29.1 37.1 26.4

United Kingdom A 8.4 18.6 60.8

United States A 12.6 20.3 49.5

Uruguay B 28.2 28.6 35.9

Venezuela C 52.2 26.4 17.0

222 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Somewhat
increase Strongly increase

3.8 0.6

15.7 0.0

10.6 1.4

7.7 0.8

4.9 0.2

4.8 1.4

11.9 2.0

7.3 9.9

4.5 0.7

14.1 2.9

5.3 1.4

1.4 0.6

0.8 2.8

1.4 0.3

4.9 2.5

9.0 3.1

12.5 5.0

4.6 2.8

3.2 1.2

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 223


Table A2.  Entrepreneurial activity (% of adults aged 18–64)
An equals sign (=) indicates that the ranking position is tied with another economy or economies

Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Established Business
Activity Ownership Informal investment

Score Rank/49 Score Rank/49 Score Rank/49

Austria 6.8 40 8.3 15= 4.3 20=

Brazil 20.0 8= 10.4 7 10.8 5

Canada 16.5 13 6.2 27 4.5 18=

Chile 27.0 4 7.3 19 22.4 1

China 6.0 44= 3.2 43 4.3 20=

Colombia 28.0 2 5.1 34 2.6 34=

Croatia 13.2 17 3.4 42 2.8 32=

Cyprus 8.3 34= 5.7 29= 3.3 27

Egypt 6.6 41 2.6 46= 2.0 39=

France 9.2 29 2.9 44= 5.3 15=

Germany 9.1 30= 3.6 40 3.1 29

Greece 4.9 47 13.3 3 2.1 38

Guatemala 29.4 1 11.6 5 14.0 2

Hungary 9.9 28 6.9 21 2.0 39=

India 11.5 24 9.0 12= 2.5 36

Indonesia 8.1 36 5.7 29= 3.2 28

Iran 16.4 14 10.8 6 4.6 17

Israel 8.7 32 3.5 41 2.4 37

Japan 6.4 43 6.3 26 1.5 47=

Latvia 14.2 16 12.3 4 4.2 22=

Lithuania 12.7 20 8.3 15= 3.9 25

Luxembourg 7.0 39 5.3 33 4.5 18=

Mexico 12.9 18= 1.6 49 1.8 42=

Morocco 4.2 48 4.1 37= 1.9 41

Netherlands 12.5 21 6.8 22= 6.3 12

Norway 6.5 42 5.6 31= 4.2 22=

Oman 11.7 23 4.1 37= 3.5 26

Panama 27.9 3 5.8 28 8.2 8

224 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Established Business
Activity Ownership Informal investment

Score Rank/49 Score Rank/49 Score Rank/49

Poland 1.6 49 9.8 9 1.6 45=

Puerto Rico 20.0 8= 5.6 31= 1.8 42=

Qatar 10.7 25= 3.9 39 9.1 7

Republic of Korea 11.9 22 19.9 1 2.8 32=

Romania 8.3 34= 8.6 14 1.5 47=

Saudi Arabia 19.2 10= 9.7 10 12.0 4

Serbia 10.5 27 2.9 44= 1.3 49

Slovak Republic 10.7 25= 6.6 24 2.9 30=

Slovenia 8.0 37 8.1 18 4.0 24

South Africa 8.5 33 1.8 48 1.6 45=

Spain 6.0 44= 7.0 20 2.9 30=

Sweden 9.1 30= 4.8 35 6.7 9=

Switzerland 7.4 38 8.2 17 6.7 9=

Taiwan 5.6 46 9.0 12= 5.3 15=

Togo 24.1 7 18.0 2 12.3 3

Tunisia 17.1 12 10.0 8 9.4 6

United Arab Emirates 25.5 6 4.5 36 5.4 13=

United Kingdom 12.9 18= 6.8 22= 2.6 34=

United States 19.2 10= 9.2 11 6.5 11

Uruguay 26.3 5 6.4 25 5.4 13=

Venezuela 15.9 15 2.6 46= 1.7 44

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 225


Table A3.  Public attitudes and perceptions (% of adults aged 18–64 somewhat or
strongly agree)

“There are good


Knowing someone opportunities to
who has started start a business “In my country,
a business in the in the area it is easy to start
past two years where I live” a business”

Austria 50.9 49.5 48.4

Brazil 75.8 67.9 46.8

Canada 47.3 58.8 63.0

Chile 68.6 50.5 51.1

China 56.3 56.5 25.9

Colombia 63.8 53.4 41.4

Croatia 66.5 60.0 34.0

Cyprus 82.4 26.8 48.4

Egypt 32.9 63.7 67.7

France 59.7 52.4 55.4

Germany 34.2 39.5 34.6

Greece 28.5 36.4 31.9

Guatemala 71.5 68.3 47.8

Hungary 47.9 27.2 47.4

India 47.4 75.5 78.0

Indonesia 71.4 87.2 72.2

Iran 64.1 51.3 23.7

Israel 59.2 46.8 12.9

Japan 20.4 12.7 27.5

Latvia 38.0 34.6 29.4

Lithuania 53.1 40.4 36.5

Luxembourg 41.3 52.4 64.2

Mexico 47.7 56.4 46.3

Morocco 51.6 62.5 36.5

Netherlands 54.5 61.6 82.9

Norway 42.6 73.6 82.8

Oman 58.5 75.7 56.5

226 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


“You see good
opportunities, but
“You personally would not start a
have the knowledge, business for fear “Are you expecting
skills and experience it might fail” (% of to start a business
required to start those seeing good in the next three
a business” opportunities) years?”*

53.2 37.9 5.4

69.2 49.0 53.0

55.4 51.8 14.2

70.1 44.9 46.1

54.4 56.7 6.4

66.6 38.5 21.2

73.6 48.6 19.5

52.7 51.7 18.3

62.8 50.6 47.3

49.8 41.0 15.8

36.2 44.3 6.5

53.8 49.5 8.3

77.5 43.2 46.5

36.8 34.0 8.7

78.1 54.0 20.1

75.5 36.8 33.3

54.2 30.9 27.5

35.4 44.0 12.3

14.9 50.9 5.1

53.9 36.7 17.6

49.8 46.2 15.1

50.0 44.1 14.0

67.1 45.5 17.5

63.3 44.4 37.3

42.2 33.8 16.2

49.2 41.0 5.5

57.6 33.3 44.3


* Strictly, this is the percentage of adults excluding those already engaged in entrepreneurial activity.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 227


Table A3 (continued)

“There are good


Knowing someone opportunities to
who has started start a business “In my country,
a business in the in the area it is easy to start
past two years where I live” a business”

Panama 48.0 53.4 54.2

Poland 46.7 72.3 79.4

Puerto Rico 66.0 64.1 26.7

Qatar 64.2 81.0 67.3

Republic of Korea 39.5 41.0 37.4

Romania 46.2 63.8 42.5

Saudi Arabia 88.2 89.5 88.7

Serbia 54.6 37.8 32.7

Slovak Republic 59.3 29.4 20.4

Slovenia 53.5 55.0 67.7

South Africa 33.6 61.3 63.9

Spain 41.3 26.0 32.2

Sweden 53.8 76.7 79.8

Switzerland 52.1 47.0 66.5

Taiwan 29.0 46.8 40.5

Togo 58.9 77.2 54.3

Tunisia 66.6 61.8 44.7

United Arab Emirates 60.1 72.2 77.2

United Kingdom 47.6 44.4 65.9

United States 55.6 46.0 65.8

Uruguay 61.3 58.2 38.7

Venezuela 37.8 63.7 52.6

228 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


“You see good
opportunities, but
“You personally would not start a
have the knowledge, business for fear “Are you expecting
skills and experience it might fail” (% of to start a business
required to start those seeing good in the next three
a business” opportunities) years?”*

76.7 48.3 53.0

47.8 53.1 2.5

68.9 45.2 26.3

64.1 43.0 43.6

54.8 18.3 23.9

62.7 55.7 6.4

88.1 63.3 31.8

66.1 41.3 12.4

42.9 42.9 8.6

62.8 50.2 15.3

63.7 59.4 6.0

46.5 50.9 8.3

49.4 41.5 13.7

47.6 32.3 10.5

39.9 42.9 15.2

87.5 40.6 52.3

78.6 42.6 50.7

71.7 39.2 44.5

53.5 52.9 10.9

66.8 43.1 13.6

69.1 46.7 32.7

83.2 33.4 29.4

* Strictly, this is the percentage of adults excluding those already engaged in entrepreneurial activity.

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 229


Table A4.  Attitudes and perceptions of entrepreneurs: % of Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) and % of Established Business Ownership (EBO)

The % of those starting


or running a new or The % of those starting
established business who or running a new or
agree/strongly agree that established business
pandemic has provided who think starting a
new opportunities business is somewhat
that they want to or much more difficult
pursue/are pursuing as a year ago

% TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO

Austria 41.3 40.4 34.9 28.4

Brazil 53.7 51.6 64.8 60.8

Canada 49.8 48.6 55.5 36.8

Chile 67.5 70.1 63.3 50.7

China 84.2 88.4 31.3 18.4

Colombia 50.6 59.9 51.2 37.2

Croatia 32.2 22.9 34.8 29.0

Cyprus 56.5 57.0 40.1 19.3

Egypt 35.2 20.8 43.5 44.8

France 29.5 36.0 39.7 20.7

Germany 40.2 44.2 45.5 38.1

Greece 40.3 59.4 21.2 14.9

Guatemala 59.6 60.9 53.0 39.7

Hungary 42.9 33.9 17.4 10.2

India 68.0 50.2 68.8 68.2

Indonesia 34.8 39.6 46.7 25.0

Iran 62.3 67.2 21.6 14.2

Israel 38.5 40.1 49.9 37.9

Japan 26.8 45.4 28.2 12.3

Latvia 46.3 48.8 35.0 22.3

Lithuania 50.2 58.9 29.2 27.0

Luxembourg 49.7 44.5 50.7 49.3

Mexico 48.5 42.8 54.9 49.5

Morocco 33.6 34.4 32.1 23.0

Netherlands 32.6 35.1 48.1 32.3

230 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


The % of those
The % of those The % of those starting starting or running
starting or running or running a new or a new or established The % of those
a new or established established business business who agree/ starting or running
business who expect who agree/strongly strongly agree that a new or established
to use more digital agree that they they always consider business who are
technologies to sell always consider the the environmental aware of the United
products or services in social implications implications of Nations Sustainable
the next six months of decisions decisions Development Goals

% TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO

43.6 20.8 69.3 62.4 67.4 64.4 30.4 25.7

85.4 70.6 90.2 91.0 91.3 94.5 – –

55.3 43.4 69.9 74.9 75.8 75.0 30.8 25.7

75.4 56.8 88.1 86.9 91.9 90.2 15.0 17.2

36.9 34.1 78.4 71.5 85.8 86.8 34.4 36.8

62.3 46.0 69.6 74.3 76.3 79.4 11.8 13.2

50.1 49.2 81.0 71.2 82.5 82.2 27.8 30.3

53.0 30.9 73.4 62.9 70.2 56.9 14.1 19.6

64.0 44.8 79.7 75.6 77.2 73.9 7.8 10.0

17.6 30.3 74.3 58.9 74.0 63.6 28.0 27.3

46.0 33.3 61.1 50.3 54.5 61.5 – –

47.3 22.0 72.2 69.6 77.1 79.6 19.3 17.3

72.6 61.4 93.3 90.3 93.5 90.0 – –

37.7 18.1 66.6 57.1 80.3 65.9 24.7 22.7

28.2 22.8 84.7 82.6 74.2 79.6 7.9 4.4

60.9 40.0 88.6 83.4 84.2 80.0 6.9 12.6

53.4 33.5 71.3 42.6 68.8 36.9 – –

48.5 23.3 55.2 47.2 47.6 36.2 15.4 8.8

54.4 40.7 64.6 51.2 55.6 59.7 – –

45.6 25.8 70.7 68.0 76.0 78.3 25.9 19.7

28.8 23.3 71.4 81.9 76.3 82.0 16.2 23.8

55.0 43.8 85.3 80.4 82.4 82.0 – –

78.9 73.6 85.2 87.9 87.5 84.1 8.9 15.4

63.4 38.2 58.9 57.7 55.6 61.2 5.0 5.0

38.5 23.6 67.8 67.1 66.1 63.3 – –

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 231


Table A4 (continued)

The % of those starting


or running a new or The % of those starting
established business who or running a new or
agree/strongly agree that established business
pandemic has provided who think starting a
new opportunities business is somewhat
that they want to or much more difficult
pursue/are pursuing as a year ago

% TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO

Norway 39.1 33.4 36.0 33.0

Oman 25.1 26.7 51.9 25.8

Panama 58.1 58.6 61.1 44.4

Poland 30.2 16.6 38.1 36.7

Puerto Rico 55.1 57.9 66.9 38.8

Qatar 36.0 50.2 60.0 42.2

Republic of Korea 49.6 67.8 10.5 1.8

Romania 43.9 60.0 63.0 38.0

Saudi Arabia 15.5 15.2 67.2 51.1

Serbia 29.4 45.5 20.3 19.3

Slovak Republic 9.3 7.1 32.6 25.7

Slovenia 21.9 20.8 48.5 35.7

South Africa 57.8 55.4 58.9 46.5

Spain 53.1 52.5 40.3 27.2

Sweden 23.7 23.1 33.4 33.0

Switzerland 28.8 40.1 36.4 27.0

Taiwan 39.5 69.3 41.9 21.5

Togo 75.4 81.2 18.1 18.4

Tunisia 65.2 75.0 20.4 23.8

United Arab Emirates 25.7 36.7 50.2 51.7

United Kingdom 46.1 55.2 57.0 36.9

United States 53.3 57.2 50.4 45.4

Uruguay 33.5 37.8 42.2 31.4

Venezuela 41.3 21.5 51.0 36.9

232 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


The % of those
The % of those The % of those starting starting or running
starting or running or running a new or a new or established The % of those
a new or established established business business who agree/ starting or running
business who expect who agree/strongly strongly agree that a new or established
to use more digital agree that they they always consider business who are
technologies to sell always consider the the environmental aware of the United
products or services in social implications implications of Nations Sustainable
the next six months of decisions decisions Development Goals

% TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO % TEA % EBO

47.7 31.9 48.5 54.0 61.8 66.9 61.3 54.1

54.7 37.7 54.6 68.7 48.5 63.4 – –

80.3 62.4 90.9 88.0 93.7 91.5 – –

29.1 14.7 85.4 91.9 83.5 90.6 43.2 60.3

78.4 56.2 89.4 92.1 90.3 88.9 – –

55.6 64.9 78.7 79.2 82.7 77.8 14.9 14.8

46.4 61.0 67.7 63.3 62.2 72.6 30.5 22.9

38.4 31.0 88.8 90.5 85.0 88.0 29.2 47.3

62.1 71.7 79.5 82.2 82.5 83.0 – –

33.1 28.2 74.0 75.3 78.3 77.6 12.4 11.6

34.0 22.0 71.1 71.4 70.7 71.8 30.2 26.0

52.4 26.0 83.4 88.2 93.0 86.9 30.2 22.9

45.1 36.5 83.0 80.4 75.5 70.9 18.7 15.4

46.5 26.6 68.5 65.9 68.9 71.7 30.8 26.1

36.5 29.2 60.0 57.7 60.8 59.9 – –

31.9 20.8 71.4 69.6 75.3 69.9 32.6 17.7

57.8 31.3 90.9 77.6 87.4 80.3 31.7 23.6

32.4 18.2 75.4 61.1 70.4 54.3 22.9 7.0

45.9 31.7 86.2 90.1 88.3 91.1 6.5 9.3

81.9 79.1 90.2 87.9 90.0 84.4 30.6 26.8

60.0 31.3 74.4 61.7 73.3 61.7 – –

56.6 40.6 72.8 64.3 68.8 63.1 – –

60.0 41.9 85.0 78.2 87.3 78.7 11.0 16.4

70.6 70.8 85.4 86.2 84.9 82.6 – –

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 233


Table A5.  Entrepreneurial activity by age, gender and education

Total early-stage Established Business


Entrepreneurial Activity Ownership (EBO)
(TEA) by gender by gender

% Male % Female % Male % Female

Austria 7.4 6.1 10.6 6.1

Brazil 23.0 17.2 14.2 6.8

Canada 18.3 14.8 7.0 5.4

Chile 28.9 25.2 8.8 5.8

China 6.9 5.0 3.5 2.9

Colombia 30.1 26.1 6.2 4.0

Croatia 17.0 9.5 4.3 2.5

Cyprus 11.7 4.9 7.6 3.9

Egypt 9.4 3.7 4.0 1.1

France 11.2 7.3 3.7 2.2

Germany 11.0 7.1 4.5 2.6

Greece 6.3 3.4 16.5 10.2

Guatemala 30.8 28.2 13.6 9.7

Hungary 12.0 7.9 9.4 4.6

India 11.6 11.4 10.5 7.6

Indonesia 7.0 9.2 5.5 5.9

Iran 19.3 13.6 17.6 3.9

Israel 10.5 7.0 3.3 3.6

Japan 9.1 3.6 8.6 4.1

Latvia 17.8 10.6 16.3 8.4

Lithuania 16.6 9.0 10.9 5.7

Luxembourg 8.5 5.4 6.6 3.5

Mexico 13.8 12.1 2.2 1.0

Morocco 5.4 3.1 6.8 1.5

Netherlands 15.3 9.6 8.3 5.3

Norway 8.3 4.5 7.6 3.5

Oman 11.8 11.6 5.5 2.6

234 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Level of Total early-stage
Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity
Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) for graduates and
(TEA) by % of age group for non-graduates

% of % of non-
% 18–34 % 35–64 graduates graduates

7.1 6.6 9.4 6.3

22.8 18.1 17.8 20.7

24.4 12.3 17.9 11.6

26.6 27.3 27.5 25.9

8.9 4.4 7.5 4.7

29.1 27.0 31.3 24.6

21.3 9.6 17.3 10.4

12.4 5.8 10.4 5.1

7.5 5.5 8.4 5.1

11.4 8.0 10.9 6.7

13.9 6.8 12.2 7.2

5.1 4.7 5.3 4.4

35.2 22.3 42.2 28.2

12.4 8.6 11.8 8.8

9.8 13.3 11.6 11.5

7.4 8.6 9.0 8.0

19.9 13.3 17.9 14.9

8.4 8.9 8.9 0.0

6.1 6.5 6.4 6.0

21.1 11.1 17.7 11.5

18.3 10.2 13.2 11.3

6.2 7.4 10.3 3.8

14.8 11.3 17.2 12.0

5.2 3.1 5.8 3.3

17.7 9.6 15.1 11.1

4.8 7.4 7.3 5.4

13.4 9.6 15.3 8.1

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 235


Table A5 (continued)

Total early-stage Established Business


Entrepreneurial Activity Ownership (EBO)
(TEA) by gender by gender

% Male % Female % Male % Female

Panama 31.2 24.6 7.9 3.7

Poland 1.5 1.6 10.0 9.6

Puerto Rico 22.3 17.9 8.0 3.4

Qatar 10.6 11.0 4.4 2.1

Republic of Korea 15.2 8.5 24.3 15.3

Romania 9.9 6.5 10.1 7.1

Saudi Arabia 21.6 16.1 9.5 10.1

Serbia 14.7 6.4 4.1 1.8

Slovak Republic 11.9 9.5 9.1 4.0

Slovenia 10.3 5.6 9.8 6.2

South Africa 9.1 7.9 2.0 1.7

Spain 6.0 5.9 7.5 6.5

Sweden 11.0 7.1 6.1 3.4

Switzerland 8.4 6.3 8.4 8.0

Taiwan 6.9 4.3 13.0 5.0

Togo 22.6 25.4 17.0 18.9

Tunisia 19.7 14.7 15.1 5.0

United Arab Emirates 28.0 19.7 5.1 3.1

United Kingdom 15.1 10.7 9.4 4.3

United States 20.3 18.1 10.5 7.9

Uruguay 28.88 23.87 8.4 4.5

Venezuela 16.89 15.02 2.4 2.7

236 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Level of Total early-stage
Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity
Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) for graduates and
(TEA) by % of age group for non-graduates

% of % of non-
% 18–34 % 35–64 graduates graduates

29.1 27.0 30.4 25.1

3.0 0.9 1.6 1.4

23.1 18.3 22.6 12.5

9.5 11.8 10.4 11.5

10.7 12.4 12.7 10.8

11.3 6.8 9.4 2.4

18.8 19.6 18.8 20.1

14.3 8.6 16.5 8.4

13.5 9.4 15.0 8.8

13.4 5.8 10.2 6.1

9.3 7.5 11.3 6.6

6.0 6.0 8.0 4.1

12.2 7.3 10.2 7.8

6.6 7.8 7.5 7.0

7.5 4.6 5.9 4.8

26.3 21.1 29.0 23.3

15.8 18.1 15.4 18.0

24.7 26.5 26.5 18.2

15.9 11.2 15.2 10.3

27.0 14.5 19.5 18.3

31.7 22.5 29.1 25.9

16.3 15.7 18.8 14.7

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 237


Table A6.  Sector distribution of new entrepreneurial activity
(% of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity)

Business- Consumer-
oriented oriented Extractive Transforming
services services sector sector

Austria 34.7 46.2 5.1 14.0

Brazil 19.8 57.4 2.3 20.5

Canada 33.8 43.0 1.9 21.3

Chile 16.9 53.5 4.4 25.3

China 8.5 75.2 1.5 14.8

Colombia 8.2 72.8 0.6 18.5

Croatia 32.7 32.8 11.2 23.3

Cyprus 27.1 54.8 2.9 15.2

Egypt 7.4 47.8 17.4 27.5

France 33.9 42.3 3.5 20.3

Germany 29.9 51.6 1.6 16.9

Greece 17.4 49.6 9.0 24.0

Guatemala 5.4 77.9 2.8 14.0

Hungary 26.6 39.1 6.6 27.8

India 4.8 66.8 7.6 20.8

Indonesia 2.3 87.9 2.7 7.1

Iran 17.5 56.3 5.3 20.9

Israel 42.7 44.7 0.6 11.9

Japan 41.7 51.6 0.8 5.9

Latvia 28.5 36.6 6.9 28.0

Lithuania 20.0 42.2 10.1 27.7

Luxembourg 40.3 49.2 2.9 7.6

Mexico 5.3 74.9 2.7 17.2

Morocco 11.8 71.7 2.1 14.5

Netherlands 30.8 49.8 1.1 18.3

Norway 38.7 31.2 14.5 15.6

Oman 14.4 64.0 2.8 18.8

Panama 11.5 66.7 5.5 16.3

Poland 19.5 44.3 5.5 30.7

238 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Business- Consumer-
oriented oriented Extractive Transforming
services services sector sector

Puerto Rico 22.4 60.0 2.3 15.4

Qatar 27.5 40.7 0.3 31.5

Republic of Korea 15.4 55.1 2.1 27.4

Romania 21.2 51.5 6.3 21.0

Saudi Arabia 4.2 89.2 1.2 5.4

Serbia 13.6 48.5 7.3 30.7

Slovak Republic 22.6 47.7 2.3 27.4

Slovenia 35.7 31.3 2.5 30.5

South Africa 7.9 67.3 4.5 20.3

Spain 38.5 45.6 2.5 13.4

Sweden 33.1 41.0 6.1 19.8

Switzerland 38.4 52.4 0.9 8.3

Taiwan 13.6 66.2 0.0 20.3

Togo 3.3 49.4 13.7 33.7

Tunisia 6.9 52.5 15.5 25.1

United Arab Emirates 19.5 64.3 1.8 14.4

United Kingdom 34.0 50.5 0.0 15.5

United States 22.3 47.4 3.8 26.5

Uruguay 16.1 56.7 4.9 22.3

Venezuela 4.9 70.7 3.4 21.0

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 239


Table A7.  Business exits, and reason for exit (positive, negative [non-COVID] and
COVID-related), % of adults aged 18–64

Negative,
not including
COVID-19 COVID-19
Business exits Positive pandemic pandemic

Austria 3.7 1.7 1.4 0.4

Brazil 13.0 0.9 8.2 3.0

Canada 8.2 2.8 4.0 0.6

Chile 7.6 1.6 4.0 1.6

China 3.4 0.8 1.7 0.7

Colombia 6.4 0.7 3.3 2.3

Croatia 3.6 0.9 1.9 0.4

Cyprus 4.1 0.5 2.3 1.1

Egypt 9.8 0.8 7.3 1.7

France 3.6 1.3 1.9 0.2

Germany 5.2 1.8 2.8 0.5

Greece 2.0 0.4 1.4 0.1

Guatemala 7.2 1.1 3.7 1.5

Hungary 1.9 0.5 0.7 0.3

India 6.3 1.6 3.5 0.9

Indonesia 10.5 2.1 4.7 2.4

Iran 7.4 1.1 5.4 0.2

Israel 3.7 0.7 2.2 0.4

Japan 2.0 0.6 1.0 0.2

Latvia 3.9 0.6 2.3 0.5

Lithuania 4.2 0.9 2.4 0.4

Luxembourg 4.5 1.9 1.8 0.2

Mexico 9.5 1.0 5.9 2.5

Morocco 4.3 0.2 3.2 0.8

Netherlands 5.6 2.3 2.7 0.4

Norway 1.6 0.4 0.7 0.1

Oman 11.2 1.1 6.3 3.4

Panama 11.1 1.0 5.7 4.4

Poland 3.7 0.9 0.7 2.2

240 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Negative,
not including
COVID-19 COVID-19
Business exits Positive pandemic pandemic

Puerto Rico 3.7 0.5 1.7 0.9

Qatar 9.1 1.8 4.8 1.9

Republic of Korea 3.5 0.3 3.1 0.2

Romania 1.6 0.4 0.9 0.2

Saudi Arabia 11.5 5.2 6.0 0.2

Serbia 3.7 1.1 2.1 0.2

Slovak Republic 5.3 1.1 2.3 1.2

Slovenia 2.5 0.7 1.1 0.4

South Africa 4.9 0.3 3.1 1.2

Spain 2.5 0.7 1.5 0.2

Sweden 4.1 1.5 1.8 0.1

Switzerland 2.2 0.9 0.9 0.3

Taiwan 1.9 0.7 0.8 0.3

Togo 9.7 0.5 7.4 0.9

Tunisia 8.8 0.5 6.3 1.1

United Arab Emirates 14.6 3.4 8.1 1.9

United Kingdom 2.8 0.9 1.1 0.5

United States 9.1 2.7 4.3 1.1

Uruguay 9.8 1.8 5.9 1.3

Venezuela 5.3 0.1 3.5 0.7

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 241


Table A8.  Entrepreneurial expectations and scope (% of adults aged 18–64)

The % of adults The % of adults starting a new


(aged 18–64) business with products or
starting or services that are either new
running a new to their area, new to their
Job creation expectations business and country or new to the world
anticipating
25% or more
6 or revenue from New to
more outside their New to their New to
0 jobs 1–5 jobs jobs country their area country the world

Austria 4.1 1.6 1.1 1.2 1.1 0.5 0.3

Brazil 6.2 7.4 6.4 0.4 3.0 0.4 0.1

Canada 9.2 4.2 3.1 3.0 4.2 2.2 0.9

Chile 4.6 14.4 8.0 0.1 8.6 3.4 2.6

China 3.1 1.7 1.2 0.1 0.9 0.2 0.1

Colombia 5.8 14.6 7.6 1.2 5.7 0.6 0.3

Croatia 5.6 4.2 3.4 2.7 2.6 1.6 0.7

Cyprus 1.8 3.8 2.7 1.7 0.7 1.4 0.7

Egypt 2.9 2.0 1.7 0.1 1.0 0.1 0.0

France 3.6 3.1 2.4 1.1 1.7 0.9 0.8

Germany 6.2 1.7 1.2 1.7 3.1 0.8 0.6

Greece 1.8 2.1 1.0 0.9 0.7 0.8 0.1

Guatemala 4.6 16.2 8.6 1.8 8.8 1.1 0.4

Hungary 4.5 3.6 1.7 1.0 1.0 0.7 0.4

India 4.7 5.0 1.7 0.2 2.6 0.6 0.2

Indonesia 5.2 1.6 1.3 0.3 1.4 0.1 0.0

Iran 5.4 5.5 5.5 0.5 2.2 1.5 0.5

Israel 5.3 1.7 1.7 1.3 1.1 0.4 0.6

Japan 3.5 1.7 1.1 0.4 1.4 0.9 0.4

Latvia 6.1 4.6 3.5 3.2 0.8 1.5 0.5

Lithuania 5.4 4.1 3.2 2.2 1.0 0.9 0.6

Luxembourg 2.5 1.8 2.7 1.7 0.9 1.5 0.7

Mexico 2.2 7.6 3.1 0.5 3.5 0.7 0.3

Morocco 1.5 1.6 1.2 0.2 0.5 0.1 0.0

Netherlands 6.0 3.9 2.5 2.7 2.4 1.3 0.7

242 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


The % of adults starting or running a new The % of adults starting or running a new
business using technology or processes business having customers only within
that are either new to their area, new their local area, only within their country,
to their country or new to the world and those having international customers

New to New to their New to the


their area country world Local only National International

0.9 0.3 0.3 2.1 1.9 2.5

3.4 0.5 0.2 9.8 8.7 1.3

3.5 2.1 0.3 5.8 4.8 4.7

6.6 2.6 1.5 20.3 6.2 0.5

0.7 0.3 0.1 3.3 2.3 0.2

5.1 0.6 0.4 12.7 9.5 3.9

2.8 1.8 0.5 3.1 3.9 6.0

1.0 1.4 0.8 1.6 3.2 3.4

1.0 0.1 0.0 2.4 3.4 0.4

1.7 0.8 0.9 3.0 2.8 3.1

2.5 1.4 0.5 2.8 3.0 2.5

0.7 0.7 0.0 1.6 1.1 2.0

9.5 1.3 0.7 14.8 11.0 3.2

1.6 0.4 0.5 2.8 4.5 2.6

2.0 0.6 0.2 9.0 1.6 0.3

1.4 0.0 0.0 4.6 2.2 0.4

2.0 1.2 0.5 3.6 9.3 2.9

0.6 0.6 0.6 1.8 4.5 2.2

1.2 1.2 0.5 1.4 3.2 1.3

0.7 1.3 0.4 1.7 6.3 6.1

0.8 1.2 0.5 2.3 5.2 4.9

0.8 0.5 0.5 0.7 2.3 3.6

3.8 0.5 0.5 7.1 3.8 1.2

0.4 0.1 0.0 2.2 1.5 0.4

2.2 1.4 0.8 2.2 5.1 4.8

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 243


Table A8 (continued)

The % of adults The % of adults starting a new


(aged 18–64) business with products or
starting or services that are either new
running a new to their area, new to their
Job creation expectations business and country or new to the world
anticipating
25% or more
6 or revenue from New to
more outside their New to their New to
0 jobs 1–5 jobs jobs country their area country the world

Norway 2.5 2.5 1.5 0.7 0.7 0.5 0.5

Oman 8.2 1.7 1.7 0.7 1.7 0.7 0.1

Panama 2.5 14.1 11.2 1.0 5.4 2.4 0.7

Poland 0.2 1.1 0.3 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.0

Puerto Rico 3.7 10.1 6.3 1.7 3.4 2.4 1.5

Qatar 2.5 1.9 6.2 1.1 2.0 1.1 0.9

Republic of
2.4 5.6 4.0 0.6 1.1 1.9 0.4
Korea

Romania 2.7 3.6 2.0 1.1 1.3 0.4 0.0

Saudi Arabia 3.9 10.8 4.5 1.0 4.6 0.8 0.1

Serbia 3.8 5.4 1.3 0.7 1.1 0.3 0.0

Slovak
7.6 2.5 0.7 1.2 2.3 1.3 0.5
Republic

Slovenia 3.1 3.6 1.3 1.8 0.8 1.0 0.9

South Africa 2.3 4.3 1.8 1.6 2.4 0.3 0.0

Spain 3.3 2.0 0.6 0.6 0.9 0.5 0.3

Sweden 5.5 2.3 1.3 1.3 1.0 0.7 0.6

Switzerland 3.9 2.7 0.8 0.9 1.5 0.6 0.7

Taiwan 2.0 1.5 2.1 0.5 0.7 0.5 0.3

Togo 9.6 10.5 4.0 2.1 1.8 0.2 0.3

Tunisia 6.4 7.1 3.7 1.0 3.0 0.3 0.0

United Arab
2.7 3.2 19.6 8.7 3.9 4.3 2.3
Emirates

United
5.8 4.5 2.5 1.6 1.7 0.8 0.5
Kingdom

United States 9.2 5.4 4.7 2.8 3.3 2.3 1.9

Uruguay 10.2 9.7 6.4 1.1 4.9 2.1 0.9

Venezuela 4.7 9.1 2.1 0.5 2.5 0.4 0.6

244 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


The % of adults starting or running a new The % of adults starting or running a new
business using technology or processes business having customers only within
that are either new to their area, new their local area, only within their country,
to their country or new to the world and those having international customers

New to New to their New to the


their area country world Local only National International

0.2 0.4 0.4 1.9 2.4 2.0

1.5 0.5 0.0 2.7 5.7 3.1

6.0 2.2 0.5 8.1 16.5 2.8

0.2 0.1 0.1 1.0 0.5 0.1

3.3 2.8 1.3 2.1 10.9 6.4

1.8 1.1 0.8 2.2 4.7 2.8

0.7 1.4 0.2 1.1 8.2 2.3

1.1 0.3 0.1 3.6 3.4 1.3

5.1 1.1 0.1 10.0 5.7 3.4

0.8 0.5 0.0 4.6 4.1 1.6

2.1 1.1 0.1 3.5 3.5 2.7

0.7 1.5 1.1 1.0 2.7 4.3

2.3 0.2 0.1 5.0 1.5 1.7

0.8 0.5 0.2 2.3 1.8 1.7

0.8 0.6 0.5 1.8 3.8 2.6

1.2 0.6 0.5 2.0 2.6 2.3

0.7 0.7 0.4 1.4 2.6 1.5

1.0 0.3 0.3 9.8 10.2 3.6

2.8 0.6 0.0 6.7 7.3 2.6

4.4 4.9 2.3 4.5 7.2 13.2

1.2 0.9 0.3 3.3 5.9 3.3

3.3 1.8 2.2 6.3 6.9 5.1

4.6 1.7 1.0 10.1 11.2 3.7

2.3 0.5 0.3 9.3 4.2 1.6

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 245


Table A9.  The motivation to start a business (% of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial
Activity who somewhat or strongly agree)

“To earn a
“To make a “To build great “To continue living because
difference in wealth or very a family jobs are
the world” high income” tradition” scarce”

Austria 37.9 37.4 19.1 46.0

Brazil 75.2 64.3 44.1 82.0

Canada 64.1 65.8 38.1 58.5

Chile 55.1 54.7 27.9 69.6

China 14.7 60.9 27.2 60.3

Colombia 47.6 54.0 34.5 86.6

Croatia 40.8 48.8 26.7 70.2

Cyprus 45.3 78.3 25.4 60.5

Egypt 58.7 71.9 52.6 84.8

France 23.7 42.3 22.2 42.6

Germany 42.8 47.8 32.9 47.2

Greece 23.5 56.7 39.6 63.6

Guatemala 80.9 78.5 52.4 89.1

Hungary 66.9 37.0 21.6 57.9

India 80.9 69.0 68.6 78.0

Indonesia 48.5 81.6 31.0 80.6

Iran 34.9 85.1 22.8 69.9

Israel 33.4 77.7 16.5 50.9

Japan 31.9 41.1 26.5 37.1

Latvia 29.3 40.4 22.6 63.9

Lithuania 40.8 46.5 24.0 66.6

Luxembourg 55.8 48.3 37.6 47.0

Mexico 68.2 51.4 53.1 86.9

Morocco 13.5 61.2 19.5 82.5

Netherlands 46.8 45.8 24.6 39.4

Norway 48.0 46.1 22.9 30.4

Oman 32.8 75.1 36.9 73.2

Panama 68.5 59.5 45.7 85.0

Poland 16.7 47.6 14.4 73.1

246 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


“To earn a
“To make a “To build great “To continue living because
difference in wealth or very a family jobs are
the world” high income” tradition” scarce”

Puerto Rico 70.6 48.6 29.5 67.2

Qatar 46.9 82.0 32.5 59.9

Republic of Korea 8.4 79.2 4.6 27.1

Romania 81.7 74.3 41.3 71.1

Saudi Arabia 64.6 87.3 61.9 85.2

Serbia 21.6 43.4 22.6 81.0

Slovak Republic 29.2 36.5 29.9 78.8

Slovenia 50.2 57.0 29.8 57.4

South Africa 80.4 80.8 49.2 89.5

Spain 39.3 39.1 21.4 70.6

Sweden 44.0 52.1 16.3 24.9

Switzerland 57.4 37.1 11.2 47.1

Taiwan 53.6 49.5 24.0 30.8

Togo 52.4 83.3 30.3 81.3

Tunisia 31.8 56.2 33.3 89.7

United Arab Emirates 54.8 69.5 34.4 65.3

United Kingdom 51.9 61.1 18.7 60.6

United States 69.3 70.8 36.5 54.5

Uruguay 40.5 46.1 27.2 65.4

Venezuela 53.1 62.5 33.0 89.9

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 247


Table A10.  National Entrepreneurship Context Index and number of Entrepreneurial
Framework Conditions (EFCs) scored as sufficient or better (score ≥5)

Number of Entrepreneurial
Framework Conditions
(EFCs) scored as
Income level sufficient or better (≥5) NECI score

Argentina Level B 3 3.7

Austria Level A 5 4.8

Brazil Level C 2 3.6

Canada Level A 7 5.1

Chile Level B 6 4.5

China (PRC) Level C 9 5.6

Colombia Level C 5 4.5

Croatia Level B 3 4.1

Cyprus Level A 4 4.3

Egypt Level C 4 4.3

France Level A 8 5.1

Germany Level A 6 5.1

Greece Level B 3 4.6

Guatemala Level C 4 3.8

Hungary Level B 4 4.7

India Level C 13 6.1

Indonesia Level C 11 5.8

Iran Level C 1 3.6

Israel Level A 8 5.5

Italy Level A 2 4.2

Japan Level A 5 5

Latvia Level B 10 5.5

Lithuania Level A 12 5.8

Luxembourg Level A 7 5

Mexico Level B 3 3.8

Morocco Level C 2 4.3

Netherlands Level A 13 5.9

Norway Level A 7 5.2

Oman Level B 1 4.2

248 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Number of Entrepreneurial
Framework Conditions
(EFCs) scored as
Income level sufficient or better (≥5) NECI score

Panama Level B 3 4.3

Poland Level B 2 3.8

Puerto Rico Level B 1 3.8

Qatar Level A 11 5.7

Republic of Korea Level A 10 5.7

Romania Level B 3 4.2

Saudi Arabia Level A 11 6.3

Serbia Level B 5 4.6

Slovak Republic Level B 3 4.4

Slovenia Level A 4 4.8

South Africa Level C 0 4.1

Spain Level A 3 4

Sweden Level A 6 5

Switzerland Level A 11 5.8

Taiwan Level B 12 6.2

Togo Level C 0 3.6

Tunisia Level C 0 3.7

United Arab Emirates Level A 13 7.2

United Kingdom Level A 5 4.7

United States Level A 6 5.2

Uruguay Level B 5 4.5

Venezuela Level C 2 3.2

GEM total 5 4.8

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 249


GEM Global Sponsor

BABSON COLLEGE
Babson College is a founding institution and sponsor of the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM).
Located in Wellesley, Massachusetts, USA, with hub locations in Boston and Miami, Babson is
recognized internationally as a leader in entrepreneurship education.
Ranked No. 1 in entrepreneurship education for 26 consecutive years by US News & World Report,
Babson is the first to understand that thinking and acting entrepreneurially is more than just an
inclination. It can be taught. And Babson does it better than anyone.
Babson grants BS degrees through its innovative undergraduate program, and offers MBA and MS
degrees, as well as certificate programs through its F.W. Olin Graduate School of Business.
Babson Executive Education and the Babson Academy for the Advancement of Global
Entrepreneurial Learning also help drive growth and innovation at organizations and other
universities all around the world.
At Babson, we believe that entrepreneurship is the most powerful force in creating great economic
and social value everywhere.
The College’s student body is globally diverse, representing 77 countries and speaking more than
50 languages. Twenty-nine per cent of undergraduates and 39% of graduates are international. An
additional 7% and 9% hold dual passports, respectively.
One hundred per cent of Babson students take entrepreneurship courses. A broad variety of
entrepreneurship topics are taught by 25 tenured or tenure-track entrepreneurship faculty, all having
practical startup experience, and by 22 highly accomplished entrepreneurs, investors and business
leaders serving as adjunct faculty. In addition, entrepreneurship is integrated throughout the
curriculum across all business and liberal arts disciplines.
As the educator, convener and thought leader for Entrepreneurship of All Kinds®, Babson College
shapes the entrepreneurial leaders our world needs most: those with strong functional knowledge and
the skills and vision to navigate change, accommodate ambiguity, surmount complexity, and motivate
teams in a common purpose to create sustainable economic and social value in organizations of all
types and sizes.
Besides GEM, Babson has co-founded and continues to sponsor the Babson College
Entrepreneurship Research Conference (BCERC), the largest academic research conference focused
exclusively on entrepreneurship, as well as the Successful Transgenerational Entrepreneurship Project
(STEP) — a global family business research project. Babson is home to The Diana Project™, which
engages in research activities, forums and scholarship focusing on women entrepreneurs and their
growth.
For more information, visit www.babson.edu.

250 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Report Sponsors

CARTIER WOMEN’S INITIATIVE


The Cartier Women’s Initiative is an annual international entrepreneurship
program which aims to drive change by empowering women impact
entrepreneurs. Founded in 2006, the program is open to women-run and
women-owned businesses from any country and sector that aim to have a
strong and sustainable social and/or environmental impact.
At the heart of the Cartier Women’s Initiative is the vision of a world
where every woman impact entrepreneur can realize her full potential. To
reach this vision, obtaining and monitoring hard data related to the state
of women’s entrepreneurship is critical in enrolling more support into the
ecosystem and to drive collaboration. Cartier Women’s Initiative partnered
with GEM as it was in search of a partner to track, monitor and assess women
entrepreneurship activities.

THE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT FRIBOURG


The School of Management Fribourg (HEG-FR) is a bilingual public business
school located in Fribourg, Switzerland, and a member of the University of
Applied Sciences and Arts of Western Switzerland (HES-SO). Its Institute of
Small and Medium Enterprises houses the Swiss chapter of GEM research,
which is headed by Professor Rico Baldegger, PhD, in collaboration with
other colleagues such as those at SUPSI Manno in Ticino, Switzerland.
One of the forerunners in Switzerland for training and interdisciplinary
research in the area of entrepreneurship and SMEs (small and medium
enterprises), the School of Management Fribourg has a particular
thematic interest in research on women’s entrepreneurship and impacts of
entrepreneurship on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report 251


Sponsor GEM

Most stakeholders want to advance entrepreneurial activity. But it is difficult to make


informed decisions without having the right data. Global Entrepreneurship Monitor fills
this void. Watch this short video to learn why many organizations — such as Babson
College, Cartier Women’s Initiative, Fribourg School of Management, Shopify and the
Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative — sponsor GEM, the world’s longest-running
study of entrepreneurship. (Click on the image or go to https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=UAFWuMSUxJE.)

252 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2022/2023 Global Report


Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) is a consortium of national
country teams, primarily associated with top academic institutions,
that carries out survey-based research on entrepreneurship around
the world. GEM is the only global research source that collects data
on entrepreneurship directly from individual entrepreneurs. GEM’s
Adult Population Survey (APS) provides analysis on the characteristics,
motivations and ambitions of individuals starting businesses, as well as
social attitudes towards entrepreneurship. The National Expert Survey
(NES) looks at the national context in which individuals start businesses.
The unique GEM tools and data benefit numerous stakeholder groups:
• Academics are able to apply unique approaches to studying
entrepreneurship at the national level;
• Policymakers are able to make better-informed decisions to help
their entrepreneurial ecosystems thrive;
• Entrepreneurs have better know­ledge on where to invest and
influence;
• Sponsors collaborate with GEM to advance their organizational
interests;
• International organizations leverage the entrepreneurial insights
from GEM through reports and events.
In numbers, GEM is:
• 24 years of data;
• 3,600,000+ GEM Adult Population Survey interviews since 1999;
• 173,000+ respondents in the 2022 Adult Population Survey;
• 2,000+ expert interviews for the 2022 GEM National Expert Survey;
• 120+ economies since 1999;
• 370+ specialists in entrepreneurship research (GEM National Team
members);
• 300+ academic and research institutions;
• 200+ funding institutions;
• 1,000+ publications in peer reviewed journals.
GEM began in 1999 as a joint project between Babson College (USA) and
London Business School (UK). The consortium has become the richest
resource of information on entrepreneurship, publishing a range of
global, national and “special topic” reports on an annual basis.

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