Templeton Foundation Funds Major Study of Entrepreneurship in Developing World
Published: March 20, 2008
The John Templeton Foundation has provided a $3.3 million grant for a new project
to focus on wealth creation and poverty reduction in developing countries by bringing
together some of the nation’s leading economists and scholars to form The Enterprise
Initiative, based at the University of Chicago.
University scholars will join researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s
Poverty Action Lab and Yale’s Economic Growth Center.
The researchers will assemble data and develop high-quality models that will focus
on the role of enterprise and simulate the impact of various alternative polices,
according to project director Robert Townsend, the Charles E. Merriam Professor
of Economics and the College at the University of Chicago. With the help of researchers
at the Computation Institute at the University of Chicago, the Enterprise Initiative
integrates advanced computation and seeks to develop an innovative and complex web-based
program that will be able to provide visual simulations of different policies. The
new models created will evaluate the choice of occupation, education and access
to credit and insurance at the household levels, and simulate the impact on growth,
inequality and poverty reduction at the regional and national levels.
“This project will help us explain the story behind successful enterprise and its
impact,” Townsend said. “Traditionally, economic research has been divided in its
approaches and fields. We will seek to integrate subfields and promote a more holistic
approach to looking at development.” He termed the approach “applied general equilibrium
enterprise economics.”
Townsend’s work in Thailand, in which he examined individual decisions in the home
and determined the relationship of those choices to economic changes on a national
level, spurred the Enterprise Initiative. Thailand is a prototypical developing
Asian economy with a strong culture and history of entrepreneurial activity.
Townsend’s research integrates survey and geographic data from government ministries
with his own longitudinal survey data. The Townsend Thai data comes from the Thai
Family Research Project, which Townsend helped establish and has co-directed for
more than 10 years. That project is an ongoing longitudinal study of nearly 3,000
households in Thailand. Townsend’s upcoming book, Financial Systems in Developing
Economies: Growth, Inequality, and Policy Evaluation in Thailand, features important
new findings on the relationship between individuals’ choices and entrepreneurial
behavior and overall economic growth, including:
• Poverty has decreased by more than 60% in the past 35 years,
with dramatic regional patterns of growth, first concentrating around urban centers,
and later in more remote areas. However, inequality persists.
• Households have made persistent transitions from rice farming
to other occupations, including business. Since profits from business are high relative
to wage labor, and early on there were few households in business, this transition
is associated with an increase in per-capita income and a growth in inequality.
However, this income differential has decreased as demand from industrialization
eventually increased the wages of unskilled labor.
• Occupation shifts, education and enhanced intermediation account
for 39% of income and inequality change.
• Approximately 80% of the growth in productivity at the national
level is due to entrepreneurial activity, along with an expanding formal financial
sector.
• After Thailand faced an economic crisis in 1997 and wages dropped,
the share of households in business for themselves nearly doubled to 40%, though
these businesses were not as profitable as those established before the crisis.
• The availability of credit from government loan programs and
community-based cooperative loan arrangements has had a notable impact on consumption,
profits and wages.
Building from Townsend’s research, The Enterprise Initiative will use the precise
data from Thailand to construct the monthly income, balance sheets and cash-flow
statements of scientifically sampled households, to evaluate the effects of entrepreneurship
on macro-economic growth. Additionally, the Initiative will seek to collect new
data from other emerging economies, such as Ghana, Mexico and India, to test economic
theories and evaluate enterprise on a wider scale.
Housed at the University’s distinguished Economics Department, the Enterprise Initiative
will tackle questions developed by economists as they incorporate their expertise
to evaluate the range of choices and consequences that arise as an economy grows,
or fails to grow.
The researchers’ high-quality data will assist policy-makers in modeling different
policy options. Researchers will be able to suggest, for instance, how constructing
a road in a particular area could boost business and what financial products and
services could be most effective in encouraging development. The project will also
shed new light on the circumstances that lead to the growth of entrepreneurialism,
a critical asset in emerging economies.
The project intends to examine how people in ordinary circumstances become involved
in the creation of wealth for their own benefit, and ultimately the benefit of many
others. It will examine factors, such as mindsets, aspirations and talent, which
enable people to overcome obstacles and become accomplished entrepreneurs.
By gathering data, sharing the stories of successful individuals who have made transformations
from poverty to relative abundance, modeling choices and modeling their impact on
the larger economy, the project hopes to provide guidance to policy-makers and others
who are looking to alleviate world poverty.
Link: http://news.uchicago.edu/news.php?asset_id=1303