2022:2023 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Global Report
2022:2023 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Global Report
2022:2023 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Global Report
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.
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)
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
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 2.5 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 2.9 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
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
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.
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.”
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.
Level B Economies with a GDP per capita of between $20,000 and $40,000.
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
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
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.
LEVEL B
average
62%
Mexico (78%)
India (74%)
32%
Indonesia (75%)
LEVEL C
average
72%
• 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.
5 The Netherlands
4 India
3 Taiwan
• 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.
• 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
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.
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.
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 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
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
Analysis
1
What Is GEM?
Stephen Hill and Aileen Ionescu-Somers
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.”
OUTCOME
(socio-economic development)
Social, cultural, political,
economic context
◆ BY TYPE
TEA, EBO, EEA
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)
Anna Niszkács
Owner and Managing Director of Gerbeaud
Gasztronómia Kft. (Hungary)
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.
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
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.
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.
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
Tatiana Pimenta
CEO & Founder, Vittude (Brazil)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2019
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,
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
Level B
Level B
2019
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
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,
41
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT
Yi Wang
Founder, Anban Tech (China)
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
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
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.
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.”
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.
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
Level B
Oman
Level B
Oman
Latvia
Latvia
Slovak Republic
Taiwan
Poland
Uruguay
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:
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
35
30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
United Arab Emirates
25
Togo
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
Charlotte Wang
Founder of EQuota (China)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2020
30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
25 United Arab Emirates
Togo
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
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.
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 States
Canada
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
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
ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT
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
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).
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%).
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
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”
ENTREPRENEUR HIGHLIGHT
Gilles Suard
Founder, Almighty Tree (Switzerland)
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
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
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.”
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
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
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
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
Spain
Canada
Switzerland
Norway
Swarna Shiv
Founder, Unsmudgeable (United States)
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.
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
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
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.”
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
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
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.
Ken Gordon
President and CEO, Quantum Silicon Inc. (Canada)
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
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.
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
Rasha Rady
Co-founder and CEO of Chefaa (Egypt)
Cartier Women’s Initiative Fellow, 2020
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
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
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
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
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
Level C
Level C
Colombia
Colombia Venezuela
Guatemala Guatemala
Level B
Level B
Mexico Puerto Rico
TEA
2022
Oman Uruguay
Chile
Poland Mexico
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
30
Guatemala
Colombia Panama
Chile
Uruguay
25
United Arab Emirates
Togo
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
FIGURE 7.3 The ratio of Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) to business exits (both % adults)
Source: GEM Adult Population Survey 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
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
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
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 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
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
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.
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
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.
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
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
NECI score
70
Switzerland
Sweden United States
60 United Kingdom
Germany Netherlands
Republic of Korea
France
Japan China
10
3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5
54 Taiwan was also in the top four in the NECI, but does
not appear in the GII league table.
Argentina
Q Population (2021): 45.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 23.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Austria
Q Population (2021): 9.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 58.4 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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!
Brazil
Q Population (2021): 214.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 16.1 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Canada
Q Population (2021): 38.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 52.1 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Chile
Q Population (2021): 19.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 29.1 thousand (World Bank)
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)
China
Q Population (2021): 1,412.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 19.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Colombia
Q Population (2021): 51.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 16.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Croatia
Q Population (2021): 3.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 33.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Cyprus
Q Population (2021): 1.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Contact
Egypt
Q Population (2021): 104.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 13.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
France
Q Population (2021): 67.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 50.7 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Germany
Q Population (2021): 83.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 57.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Florian Täube
Greece
Q Population (2021): 10.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
[email protected]
Type of institution
Research Institute
Guatemala
Q Population (2021): 17.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 9.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
www.kec.ufm.edu
www.gem.ufm.edu
Hungary
Q Population (2021): 9.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 36.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
India
Q Population (2021): 1,393 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 7.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Type of institution
Research Institute
Website
https://www.ediindia.org
Indonesia
Q Population (2021): 276.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 12.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Type of institution
University
Iran
Q Population (2021): 85.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 15.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Israel
Q Population (2021): 9.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 43.7 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Italy
Q Population (2021): 59.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 45.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
https://www.univpm.it
Japan
Q Population (2021): 125.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Latvia
Q Population (2021): 1.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.5 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Lithuania
Q Population (2021): 2.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 42.7 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Luxembourg
Q Population (2021): 0.6 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 134.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
https://statistiques.public.lu/en/
statistique-publique/statec/red.html
Mexico
Q Population (2021): 130.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 20.0 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
Morocco
Q Population (2021): 37.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 8.1 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Netherlands
Q Population (2021): 17.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 63.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
Norway
Q Population (2021): 5.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 79.2 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Oman
Q Population (2021): 5.2 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.1 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Panama
Q Population (2021): 4.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 31.7 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Poland
Q Population (2021): 37.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 37.5 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Contact
Team Funders
Type of institution [email protected]
Team leader Ministry of Development Funds and
Public Body Regional Policy
Anna Tarnawa
Puerto Rico
Q Population (2021): 3.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Qatar
Q Population (2021): 2.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 93.5 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
Republic of Korea
Q Population (2021): 51.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 46.9 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
Romania
Q Population (2021): 19.1 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 35.4 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Saudi Arabia
Q Population (2021): 35.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 49.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Contact
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Serbia
Q Population (2021): 6.8 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 21.4 thousand (World Bank)
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)
IPSOS
Contact
Slovak Republic
Q Population (2021): 5.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 33.0 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Slovenia
Q Population (2021): 2.1 million (IMF)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 43.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
https://www.um.si/en
https://www.epf.um.si/en/
https://ipmmp.um.si/
globalni-podjetniski-monitor/
South Africa
Q Population (2021): 60.0 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 14.4 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Spain
Q Population (2021): 47.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 40.8 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
Sweden
Q Population (2021): 10.4 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 59.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
https://entreprenorskapsforum.se
Switzerland
Q Population (2021): 8.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 77.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Website
https://www.heg-fr.ch/en
Taiwan
Q Population (2021): 23.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 34.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
Togo
Q Population (2021): 8.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 2.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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.
Tunisia
Q Population (2021): 11.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 11.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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/
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)
United Kingdom
Q Population (2021): 67.3 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 49.7 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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
United States
Q Population (2021): 331.9 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 69.3 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Uruguay
Q Population (2021): 3.5 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 24.6 thousand (World Bank)
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)
Funders
ANDE
COUSA
Venezuela
Q Population (2021): 28.7 million (UN)
Q GDP per capita (2021; PPP, international $): 17.5 thousand (World Bank)
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)
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.
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”
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.
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
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
Total early-stage
Entrepreneurial Established Business
Activity Ownership Informal investment
* Strictly, this is the percentage of adults excluding those already engaged in entrepreneurial activity.
% of % of non-
% 18–34 % 35–64 graduates graduates
% of % of non-
% 18–34 % 35–64 graduates graduates
Business- Consumer-
oriented oriented Extractive Transforming
services services sector sector
Negative,
not including
COVID-19 COVID-19
Business exits Positive pandemic pandemic
Republic of
2.4 5.6 4.0 0.6 1.1 1.9 0.4
Korea
Slovak
7.6 2.5 0.7 1.2 2.3 1.3 0.5
Republic
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
“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”
Number of Entrepreneurial
Framework Conditions
(EFCs) scored as
Income level sufficient or better (≥5) NECI score
Japan Level A 5 5
Luxembourg Level A 7 5
Spain Level A 3 4
Sweden Level A 6 5
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.