Entrepreneurial spillovers across coworkers

Authors Wallskog
Journal Review of Financial Studies
Year 2022
Type Published Paper
Abstract Using large-scale administrative data, I track the employment and entrepreneurship of over forty million Americans and investigate entrepreneurial spillovers across coworkers, based on the idea that individuals who start their own firms learn institutional knowledge and entrepreneurial skills that they may teach others. I find that an individual whose current coworkers have more prior entrepreneurship experience is more likely to become an entrepreneur themself within the next five years, and these spillovers are strongest among workers with similar jobs and demographics. Furthermore, an individual is more likely to become a successful entrepreneur if those coworkers were themselves successful entrepreneurs. To quantify the role of these spillovers, I build a structural model of entrepreneurship and learning and estimate that the aggregate entrepreneurship rate would be 10% lower in the absence of learning.
Keywords Spillovers, peer effect, entrepreneurship, social learning
URL https://melaniewallskog.github.io/files/wallskog_jmp.pdf
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Experimental / Survey-Based Empirical  |   Productivity Spillovers  |   Social Network Structure