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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Management Studies

Journal of Management Studies

Volume 44 Issue 7, Pages 1165 - 1186

Published Online: 6 Nov 2007

© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd and Society for the Advancement of Management Studies



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The Entrepreneurial Organization of Heterogeneous Capital*
Kirsten Foss 1 , Nicolai J. Foss 1 , Peter G. Klein 1 and Sandra K. Klein 1
  1 Copenhagen Business School; Copenhagen Business School; University of Missouri; University of Missouri
Correspondence to  Kirsten Foss, Center for Strategic Management and Globalization, Copenhagen Business School, Porcelainshaven 24, 2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark (kf.smg@cbs.dk).
Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007

ABSTRACT

abstract  Transaction cost, property rights, and resource-based approaches to the firm assume that assets, both tangible and intangible, are heterogeneous. Arranging these assets to minimize contractual hazards, to provide efficient investment incentives, or to exploit competitive advantage is conceived as the prime task of economic organization. None of these approaches, however, is based on a systematic theory of capital heterogeneity. In this paper we outline the approach to capital developed by the Austrian school of economics and show how Austrian capital theory provides a natural bridge between theory of entrepreneurship and the theory of the firm. We refine Austrian capital theory by defining capital heterogeneity in terms of subjectively perceived attributes, the functions, characteristics, and uses of capital assets. Such attributes are not given, but have to be created or discovered by means of entrepreneurial action. Conceiving entrepreneurship as the organization of heterogeneous capital provides new insights into the emergence, boundaries, and internal organization of the firm, and suggests testable implications about how entrepreneurship is manifested.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-6486.2007.00724.x About DOI

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