Gender gap in entrepreneurship

Guzman, J and Kacperczyk, O (2019) Gender gap in entrepreneurship. Research Policy, 48 (7). pp. 1666-1680. ISSN 0048-7333 OPEN ACCESS

Abstract

Using data on the entire population of businesses registered in the states of California and Massachusetts between 1995 and 2011, we decompose the well-established gender gap in entrepreneurship. We show that female-led ventures are 63 percentage points less likely than male-led ventures to obtain external funding (i.e., venture capital). The most significant portion of the gap (65 percent) stems from gender differences in initial startup orientation, with women being less likely to found ventures that signal growth potential to external investors. However, the residual gap is as much as 35 percent and much of this disparity likely reflects investors’ gendered preferences. Consistent with theories of statistical discrimination, the residual gap diminishes significantly when stronger signals of growth are available to investors for comparable female- and male-led ventures or when focal investors appear to be more sophisticated. Finally, conditional on the reception of external funds (i.e., venture capital), women and men are equally likely to achieve exit outcomes, through IPOs or acquisitions.

More Details

Item Type: Article
Subject Areas: Strategy and Entrepreneurship
Date Deposited: 12 Apr 2019 10:32
Date of first compliant deposit: 15 Mar 2019
Last Modified: 05 Nov 2024 02:59
URI: https://lbsresearch.london.edu/id/eprint/1111
More

Export and Share


Download

Accepted Version - Text

Statistics

Altmetrics
View details on Dimensions' website

Downloads from LBS Research Online

View details

Actions (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item