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Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development Mark Casson Director, Centre for Institutional Performance, University of Reading

Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

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Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development. Mark Casson Director, Centre for Institutional Performance, University of Reading. Popular views of entrepreneurship. The entrepreneur as intellectual Artist Scientist Philosopher The entrepreneur and charisma Leadership - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic DevelopmentMark CassonDirector, Centre for Institutional Performance, University of Reading

Page 2: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Popular views of entrepreneurship

• The entrepreneur as intellectual• Artist• Scientist• Philosopher

• The entrepreneur and charisma• Leadership• Change agent• Strategist

Page 3: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Analytical approaches

• Opportunity-seeker• Innovator• Risk-taker• Judgemental decision-maker

Page 4: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Potential positive impacts on local economic development

• Job creation (and destruction)• Infrastructure-building• Creating business opportunities through

partnerships and subcontracting• Product and service innovations enhance quality

of life• Housing improvements

Page 5: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Potential negative impacts

• Jobs for immigrants and not locals• More jobs but lower skills (artisans versus

shopkeepers) • Destruction of heritage sites• ‘Shovelling out the paupers’• Political corruption

• Comment: The assessment of impacts is framed by value-judgements

Page 6: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Historical case studies

• Nineteenth century England• William Morris – artist, artisan and shopkeeper• James Watt – innovative engineer

• Late fourteenth-century England:• Richard Spynk of Norwich: financing local infrastructure• Dick Whittington – promoting London as a trading centre

• Nineteenth century Southern California• Henry Huntingdon – property developer extraordinary

Source: Casson and Casson: The Entrepreneur in History, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013

Page 7: Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Local Economic Development

Conclusions• When does entrepreneurship have a beneficial impact?• social as well as selfish concerns• aesthetic sensibility• partnership as well as individual initiative• ‘building bridges’ rather than creating divisions

• Are local impacts becoming more or less positive?• Modern projects: industrial, profit-oriented promotion, globally

financed• Medieval projects : advanced pre-industrial technologies; civic-

orientation; locally financed• Medieval entrepreneurship may have made a greater contribution

to local quality of life