Immigrant Entrepreneurship: The Role of Formal Corporate Governance Arrangement and Social Capital in Community and Family
The authors of this paper empirically test the relation between immigrants' venture creation decisions and governance mechanism under a unified framework of governance in both sociology and finance. They find that corporate governance arrangements are more valued by entrepreneurs with better education attainment and higher household income such as immigrant entrepreneurs. This type of entrepreneur tends to be more reluctant to create a venture due to the high opportunity costs. In addition, social capital embedded in the immigrant's community significantly and positively affects the new venture creation decision. At the same time, an inverted U shape relationship is observed between social capital in family and new venture creation.
The paper answers how relational governance and corporate governance are related to new venture creation in immigrant entrepreneurship especially in the emerging phase. The key argument is that the efficacy of corporate governance and relational governance mechanisms in immigrant entrepreneurship are contingent on different types of social capital that immigrant entrepreneurs possess and on the formal corporate governance arrangement, the adoption of which is influenced by immigrant entrepreneurs' characteristics.
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Xu, L., Du, W. (2013). Immigrant Entrepreneurship: The Role of Formal Corporate Governance Arrangement and Social Capital in Community and Family. Retrieved from: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2321934 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2321934