above, there is a need to develop a comprehensive
model of entrepreneurship
that encompasses the varying approaches
to studying entrepreneurship
at the societal level. That is, there is a
need for an entrepreneurship model that
acknowledges the individual person
without discounting the portion of the
external environment that is beyond the
individual or the firm’s control. Because
individuals’ personalities and behaviors,
firms, political/legal systems,
economic conditions, and social mores
are all intertwined with the national culture
from which they originate (Berger,
1991), the study of entrepreneurship under
a cultural umbrella seems appropriate.