Latest on Entrepreneurship & Innovation
A Living Laboratory of Innovatıon
Bizcast: Listen to LinkedIn Co-founder Reid Hoffman Discuss the Future of AI
Startup Success: How Founder Personalities Shape Venture Outcomes
How Social Entrepreneurs Are Building a Better Economy
Women’s History Month: Research Insights from Columbia Business School on Advancing Gender Equity in Business
Avoiding Red Tape: Nascent Industries Forge New Pathways Amidst Regulatory Challenges
- Date
Dispelling the Myths of Global Migration
Entrepreneurship & Innovation Faculty
Entrepreneurship & Innovation Research
The Economic Effects of Immigration Pardons: Evidence from Venezuelan Entrepreneurs
This paper shows that providing undocumented immigrants with an immigration pardon, or amnesty, increases their economic activity in the form of higher entrepreneurship. Using administrative census data linked to the complete formal business registry, we study a 2018 policy shift in Colombia that made nearly half a million Venezuelan undocumented migrants eligible for a pardon. Our identification uses quasi-random variation in the amount of time available to get the pardon, introducing a novel regression discontinuity approach to study this policy.
Private or public equity? The evolving entrepreneurial finance landscape
- Authors
- Date
- November 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Annual Review of Financial Economics
The US entrepreneurial finance market has changed dramatically over the last two decades. Entrepreneurs who raise their first round of venture capital retain 30% more equity in their firm and are more likely to control their board of directors. Late-stage start-ups are raising larger amounts of capital in the private markets from a growing pool of traditional and new investors. These private market changes have coincided with a sharp decline in the number of firms going public—and when firms do go public, they are older and have raised more private capital.
Decisions Over Decimal: Balancing Intuition and Information
- Authors
- Date
- October 1, 2022
- Format
-
Book
- Publisher
- Wiley
Agile decision making is imperative as you lead in a data-driven world. Uniquely bridging theory and practice, Decisions over Decimals unites data intelligence with human judgment to get to action – a sharp approach the authors refer to as Quantitative Intuition (QI). QI raises the power of thinking beyond big data without neglecting it and chasing the perfect decision while appreciating that such a thing can never really exist.
Your Family Business Needs a Board
- Authors
- Date
- September 8, 2022
- Format
-
Newspaper/Magazine Article
- Publication
- Harvard Business Review
A board should be at the helm of any family business, steering the business in the right direction. If you wish to have a business that is resilient and has a positive impact on all stakeholders (e.g., employees, customers, vendors, and society) you must make sure your board is intact and functioning optimally. This article offers some questions to consider as you develop best practices for your own board, such as who should be on the board, whether you need an independent director, and how often your board should meet.
Reporting Regulation and Corporate Innovation
- Authors
- Date
- March 1, 2022
- Format
-
Working Paper
We investigate the impact of reporting regulation on corporate innovation. Exploiting thresholds in Europe’s regulation and a major enforcement reform in Germany, we find that forcing firms to publicly disclose their financial statements discourages innovative activities. Our evidence suggests that reporting regulation has significant real effects by imposing proprietary costs on innovative firms, which in turn diminish their incentives to innovate.
The Startup Cartography Project: Measuring and Mapping Entrepreneurial Ecosystems
- Authors
- Date
- Forthcoming
- Format
-
Newspaper/Magazine Article
- Publication
- Research Policy
This paper presents the Startup Cartography Project, which offers a new set of entrepreneurial ecosystem statistics for the United States from 1988-2016. The SCP combines state-level business registration records with a predictive analytics approach to estimate the probability of “extreme” growth (IPO or high-value acquisition) at or near the time of founding for all newly-registered firms in a given year. The results indicate the ability of predictive analytics to identify high-potential start-ups at founding (using a variety of different approaches and measures).
Valuing Private Equity Strip by Strip
- Authors
-
Arpit Gupta and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
- Date
- August 9, 2021
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Finance
We propose a new valuation method for private equity investments. First, we construct a cash-flow replicating portfolio for the private investment, using cash-flows on various listed equity and fixed income instruments. The second step values the replicating portfolio using a flexible asset pricing model that accurately prices the systematic risk in listed equity and fixed income instruments of different horizons.
How Do (Green) Innovators Respond to Climate Change Scenarios? Evidence from a Field Experiment
This paper aims to unpack the pro-social motivations of green innovators. In a field experiment inviting SBIR grantees to learn more about and apply to MIT Solve, we provide scientifically valid scenarios varying the time-frame and scale of human cost of climate change. Innovators' response in clicks and applications increases with both scale and immediacy treatments. Our structural model estimates a welfare discount rate of 0.76%, providing a measure of innovators' value of future generations, and an elasticity to lives lost of 0.23, implying diminishing marginal concern to human loss.
Cheaper solar PV is key to addressing climate change
- Authors
- Date
- June 30, 2021
- Format
-
Newspaper/Magazine Article
- Publication
- MIT Technology Review
In late 2007, less than 10 years into the company’s existence, Google came out swinging on the clean energy front. To a fanfare of plaudits up and down Silicon Valley and well beyond, it declared “RE<C” as its goal: make renewable energy cheaper than coal. The company invested tens of millions of dollars into R&D efforts from concentrated solar power to hydrothermal drilling. Four years later, those efforts had been scrapped.