"The chapters in this volume analyze the interplay between knowledge, public policy, and entrepreneurship in both theory and practice. In particular, they examine how policymakers often struggle with limited economic knowledge, which hinders their ability to intervene in the market process to achieve their desired ends"--
Understanding entrepreneurship as alertness to potential profit opportunities and the activities involved with bringing those opportunities to life and public policy as laws, regulations, and activities of government, this volume analyzes the intersection of the two to show how public policy influences entrepreneurship. Using a mix of theoretical and applied research, the contributors argue that policies which incentivize productive entrepreneurship will advance economic well-being, but that the passage of such policies depends in large part on the availability and usage of economic knowledge by policymakers. If policymakers lack the relevant economic knowledge to achieve their desired outcomes, policies will be ineffective in incentivizing productive entrepreneurship.
The chapters in this volume analyze the interplay between knowledge, public policy, and entrepreneurship in both theory and practice. In particular, they examine how policymakers often struggle with limited economic knowledge, which hinders their ability to intervene in the market process to achieve their desired ends.
Section I: How Public Policy Shapes Entrepreneurship in the Private
Sector
Chapter 1: Framing Our Thinking About Entrepreneurship and Public Policy by
Abigail R. Hall
Chapter 2: Moral Entrepreneurship: Integrating Equity within Antimicrobial
Resistance Innovation by Ximena Benavides
Chapter 3: Successful Evasive Entrepreneurship: Nature or Circumstance? Three
Case Studies in the Area of Health and Safety Regulation by Alexander Köhler
Chapter 4: Exploring the Persistent Effects of Racial Discrimination on
Entrepreneurship and Growth by Olivia Gonzalez
Section II: Entrepreneurship in Civil Society and in Response to Crisis
Chapter 5: Hot Money: A Hayekian Process of Polycentric Public
Entrepreneurship in Currency Formation in Great Depression North Carolina by
Thomas Storrs
Chapter 6: Sub-Innovation: The Case of Fraccionamiento in Mexico by Carlos
Noyola
Section III: Public Policy Entrepreneurship Within the Administrative State
Chapter 7: Exploring the Interplay of Taxation and Regulation in
Institutional Arrangements by Dallin Overstreet
Chapter 8: Representation, Taxation, and Policy Entrepreneurship by Natalia
Pushkareva
Chapter 9: Knowledge and the Efficacy of Energy Efficiency Programs by Arthur
R. Wardle
Chapter 10: Majority Opinions and the Entrepreneurial Pursuit of Judicial
Power by Christian McGuire
Chapter 11: Urban Deindustrialization and Its Discontents: A Commentary on
the Social Policy Education of President Barack Obama by Michael Lachanski
Christopher J. Coyne is professor of economics at George Mason University and associate director of the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics, Mercatus Center at George Mason University.
Abigail R. Hall is associate professor of economics at the University of Tampa.
Eileen Norcross is vice president of policy research and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.