GEM 2009 Global Report
4587.87
KB, published on
14 April 2010
Please note - this report was revised to include data from Morocco on 14th April 2010.
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GEM 2008 Global Report
1658.73
KB, published on
18 January 2009
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GEM 2007 Global Report
2076.05
KB, published on
18 January 2008
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GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP MONITOR 2006 GLOBAL SUMMARY RESULTS
690.53
KB, published on
01 May 2007
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GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP MONITOR 2005 EXECUTIVE REPORT
2345.56
KB, published on
11 January 2006
This report constitutes the seventh annual assessment and review of the state of entrepreneurship in countries participating in the GEM project. Since its inception in 1999 by scholars at Babson College and London Business School, GEM has developed into one of the world’s leading research consortium concerned with improving the understanding of the relationship(s) between entrepreneurial activity and national economic growth. To this end, the project has, from the start, been designed as a multinational research program providing annual assessments of the entrepreneurial sector for a range of countries.
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GEM 2004 GLOBAL REPORT
531.59
KB, published on
27 May 2005
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GEM GLOBAL REPORT 2003
946.69
KB, published on
31 August 2004
The fifth global assessment of
national entrepreneurial activity was
completed in 2003. Surveys of the adult
population were again used to locate
those active in creating new firms. The
national average prevalence rate—the
Total Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA)
index—was 9 per 100 of those 18-64
years old. The addition of new countries
increased the range of activity from 2%
to 29%—a factor of 15. There has been
considerable year-to-year stability in this
measure for individual countries.
Among 40 GEM countries there are 2.4
billion in the working years (18-64 years
old); it is estimated that 300 million
nascent entrepreneurs are attempting
to establish 192 million new firms.
The newly created Firm
Entrepreneurial Activity (FEA) index
reflects those established firms that
expect to have an innovative impact on
the market and grow. There is less
variation among countries with the FEA
index; the range is from 2% of existing
firms and jobs in entrepreneurial firms
to more than 20% of existing firms and
jobs in entrepreneurial firms—factor of
10. Within 40 GEM countries about 57
million are managing 37 million
entrepreneurial firms.
The two indices can be used to
classify 40 GEM countries into five
groups, the most entrepreneurial
includes Chile, Korea, New Zealand, ......
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GEM Global 2002 Summary Report
306.19
KB, published on
23 December 2002
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GEM Global 2002 Executive Report
539.57
KB, published on
20 November 2002
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GEM Global 2001 Summary Report
1071.73
KB, published on
12 April 2002
2001 Summary Report - GEM
Version 8, 02 April 02.
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GEM Global 2001 Executive Report
2400.71
KB, published on
14 November 2001
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GEM Global 2000 Executive Report
688.9
KB, published on
21 March 2001
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GEM Global 1999 Executive Report
345.2
KB, published on
21 March 2000
Synopsis:
A wide and potentially growing disparity in entrepreneurial business activity within several of the world's developed countries is contributing to a significant gap in economic growth, according to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor.
This study answers three questions:
Does the level of entrepreneurial activity vary between countries, and if so to what extent?
Does the level of entrepreneurial activity affect a country's rate of economic growth and prosperity?
What makes a country entrepreneurial?
The GEM study was conducted by an international research team over two years in 10 countries, including Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. Researchers from Babson College, the London Business School and the Kauffman Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership, working with national teams, analyzed reams of data, conducted in-depth interviews with more than 300 national experts on entrepreneurship in the GEM countries and commissioned surveys of 1,000 adults in each country.
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