2010
DOI: 10.1080/00036840701579234
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An analysis of new firm survival using a hazard function

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Cited by 86 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…Existing literature that analyzes firm survival (Box, 2008;Holmes, 2010;Carr, Haggard, Hmieleski, and Zahra, 2010) underwrite the importance of the following conditions are keys: firm size, sector, export activity and innovation intensity. This research examines these variables, together with the influence of incubators, to analyze firm survival.…”
Section: Firm Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing literature that analyzes firm survival (Box, 2008;Holmes, 2010;Carr, Haggard, Hmieleski, and Zahra, 2010) underwrite the importance of the following conditions are keys: firm size, sector, export activity and innovation intensity. This research examines these variables, together with the influence of incubators, to analyze firm survival.…”
Section: Firm Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The UK Department for Business Innovation and Skills 1 estimated there were approximately 4.5 million small businesses in the UK providing 13.7 million jobs, equating to half the private sector workforce in 2011 [2]. However, while Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) 2 are of importance, it is their durability that can be considered of greater significance [3]. The precarious nature of SME existence has been well documented.…”
Section: Section One: Analysis Of Secondary Sources Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The precarious nature of SME existence has been well documented. Recent UK Office for National Statistics 3 estimates indicate that fewer than 65% of SMEs are still trading three years after start-up, with fewer than 45% surviving after five years. Others, however, argue that only about 50% of small businesses are still trading after the first three years of initial start-up [4].…”
Section: Section One: Analysis Of Secondary Sources Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Note that this resulted in data sets with either only personal loans or data sets with a mix of personal and small enterprise loans, for banks C and D. As the SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) in our data sets were all sole proprietorships, their properties were nearly identical to those of personal loans. More information on the use of survival models in SMEs in the broader sense can be found in, among others (Fantazzini and Figini, 2009;Gupta et al, 2015;Holmes et al, 2010). For the banks with data covering several loan terms, the data were split in order to get only one loan term per data set, resulting in ten data sets.…”
Section: Data Preprocessing and Missing Inputsmentioning
confidence: 99%