Institutional Economics and Firm Creation in the Hospitality and Tourism Industries: A Comparative Analysis of Developing and Developed Economies
Keywords
economic freedom, firm creation, formal and informal institutions, institutional economics
Abstract
Despite its importance for the global hospitality and tourism industry, firm creation remains an under-researched activity, particularly in terms of differences across developing and developed economies. By examining the impact of institutional structure on firm creation across economies of varying development levels, this study aims to address gaps in the literature and inform theory, practice, and public policymaking. More specifically, formal institutions such as government size, protection of property rights, sound money, free trade, and regulation are examined to understand their impacts on firm creation. This study draws upon institutional theory and uses panel data (2001–2012) from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor and Economic Freedom of the World index to test hypotheses with a sample of 37 developing and 28 developed countries. Analyses reveal differential effects of formal institutions on firm creation in developing and developed economies. Implications for future research, practice, and public policy are further discussed.
Publication Date
1-1-2017
Number of Pages
1381-1397
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Source Title
Tourism Economics
Volume
23
Issue
7
Copyright Status
Unknown
College
Rosen College of Hospitality Management
STARS Citation
Altin, Mehmet; Memili, Esra; and Sonmez, Sevil, "Institutional Economics and Firm Creation in the Hospitality and Tourism Industries: A Comparative Analysis of Developing and Developed Economies" (2017). Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 666.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/ucfscholar/666