2014
DOI: 10.16967/rpe.v2n1a3
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Influencia del capital físico y humano en la supervivencia de nuevas empresas

Abstract: RESuMENThe purpose of this study is to analyze the influence of physical and human capital on the survival of new ventures in different economic contexts. We conduct an empirical study by using a logit model to analyze new ventures' probabilities of survival. The results show that both human and physical capital influence the survival of ventures in the short and long term, with human capital playing a particularly important role. The implications of the study hinge on two key findings. First, the government's… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…Finally, it is striking that related training and experience, considered in the specialised literature as key factors for entrepreneurship success (Headd, 2003;Millan et al, 2012), do not play a more important role for new firm's survival. Nevertheless, in early stages of the venture, where novelty and smallness may become significant inhibitors, the available capital could be key to survival in the short term (Revuelto-Taboada & Simón-Moya, 2015) and more important than the related experience and training of the entrepreneur. This capital will allow the entrepreneur to acquire necessary resources, make basic investments and wipe away the first losses.…”
Section: Results For Survival At T +mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Finally, it is striking that related training and experience, considered in the specialised literature as key factors for entrepreneurship success (Headd, 2003;Millan et al, 2012), do not play a more important role for new firm's survival. Nevertheless, in early stages of the venture, where novelty and smallness may become significant inhibitors, the available capital could be key to survival in the short term (Revuelto-Taboada & Simón-Moya, 2015) and more important than the related experience and training of the entrepreneur. This capital will allow the entrepreneur to acquire necessary resources, make basic investments and wipe away the first losses.…”
Section: Results For Survival At T +mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over time, related training become a more relevant factor in those patterns that could be called winning combinations. However, if the arguments of Revuelto-Taboada and Simón-Moya (2015) are born in mind a more relevant change in relative importance would be expected, especially in the service sector, between the impact of having a high initial capital and a large staff, and having related experience and training. Therefore, there is limited evidence in favour of proposition #3.…”
Section: Results For Survival At T +mentioning
confidence: 99%