Entrepreneurship represents the views, attitudes and actions of an individual that desires to create or extract value from a perceived opportunity. This usually manifests through the individual’s willingness to face risk through the form of starting a business organization. Entrepreneurship plays a key role in transforming the economy and society by stimulating economic development, testing innovative ideas, creating new jobs, and by enriching the quality of life and human existence.
Entrepreneurship is an essential ingredient for regional development and competitiveness, and understanding its underlying factors is a matter of high interest for scholars and policy makers alike. A wealth of economic literature has studied entrepreneurship in relation to economic crises [1,2,3], as well as including locational factors of influence. The territorial distribution of entrepreneurial activity in any country is largely shaped by the specific local economic, social, and political climates in which these firms perform their activity. Economic shocks might exert a powerful, yet territorially uneven influence on the birth of new firms and the survival of existing ones. Some regions can be more resilient than others to economic shocks, therefore the entrepreneurial initiative is less affected by the economic crises [4]. However, all regions are impacted to a certain degree when a major recession occurs, such as the one triggered by the 2007–2009 global economic crisis.
During economic crises, new firms, which are generally smaller and more vulnerable, are less likely to survive and thrive. Their survival rate is influenced not only by the size and sector of activity, but also by the location [5,6]. In this context, an important factor in understanding the regional differences in the recovery from a crisis is the spatial dependence that exists among neighboring regions. Spatial dependence is represented by similar characteristics of neighboring regions from a geographic point of view. It implies that neighboring regions tend to be alike, i.e., their characteristics are usually positively correlated.
The crises act as a trigger for some opportunity-driven entrepreneurs, and resilient regions can thrive even in these conditions or recover faster after the depression. Given the scarcity of regional statistical data regarding the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, we draw lessons from the previous major crisis, namely the 2007–2009 Great Recession, for assessing the likely economic effects of the current crisis on the birth of new firm. We focus on the interval between 2008 and 2020, aiming to investigate the impact of a major economic crisis on new business formation in Romania, and to determine if the response to crises is shaped by location.Previous research indicated that besides their contribution to economic growth, new firms are also able to enhance economic resilience to crises [2,3]. Some studies showed that regions with a high level of entrepreneurship are more flexible and more resilient to exogenous shocks due to increased economic diversification and the entrepreneurs’ ability to perceive and exploit potential opportunities even in times of crisis [9]. Recent academic debates on new firm formation during the last economic crisis showed that regions with high entrepreneurial initiative are better at withstanding crises and can adapt faster to new economic conditions [10]. Resilience to economic crises is frequently linked to entrepreneurship in the literature, and the findings reveal that entrepreneurship contributes to urban resilience [11], wage cuts may relatively influence entrepreneurial initiative [12], and the “spatial stickiness” of the “entrepreneurial regimes” promote resilience and the ability to adapt to economic shocks [10].
Entrepreneurial initiative, embodied in new firm formation, represents an important driver of economic development, which has captured the interest of many researchers trying to better understand its determinants. Numerous studies that empirically investigated the factors that influence new firm formation [10,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24] obtained different results, depending on the period or the geographic localization of the study. Previous research revealed many regional factors affecting the dynamics of entrepreneurial activity, such as population growth, demographic characteristics, economic growth, wages, unemployment, and entrepreneurial density [14,20,25,26].
This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/su131910702