Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households

In light of different Philippine economic issues, it can be said that this country is evolving and is constant at the same time. This evolution and consistency are present in the opportunity-seeking behavior of Filipino households. One aspect of change is the higher engagement of households in entre...

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Main Author: Arguelles, Carlo Anton G.
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Published: Animo Repository 2016
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11002
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-113512023-10-14T00:28:24Z Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households Arguelles, Carlo Anton G. In light of different Philippine economic issues, it can be said that this country is evolving and is constant at the same time. This evolution and consistency are present in the opportunity-seeking behavior of Filipino households. One aspect of change is the higher engagement of households in entrepreneurship as reported by GEM (2014a). Data on entrepreneurship presents the Philippines with an early-stage entrepreneurship (TEA) rate of 18.4%. GEM (2014b) stated that this rate is higher than the average start up rates of Asia and Oceania (13%); which implies that Filipino households, relative to their counterparts in these regions, are more active in self-employment. On the side of constancy, the propensity for members of Filipino households to migrate remains the same. The Philippine economy is characterized by very high migration rates. In fact, the Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO, 2013) estimated that over 10 million Filipinos - or some 10% of the Philippine population - were working abroad in 2013. 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11002 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Return migrants—Philippines Entrepreneurship—Philippines Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations Migration Studies
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Return migrants—Philippines
Entrepreneurship—Philippines
Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations
Migration Studies
spellingShingle Return migrants—Philippines
Entrepreneurship—Philippines
Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations
Migration Studies
Arguelles, Carlo Anton G.
Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
description In light of different Philippine economic issues, it can be said that this country is evolving and is constant at the same time. This evolution and consistency are present in the opportunity-seeking behavior of Filipino households. One aspect of change is the higher engagement of households in entrepreneurship as reported by GEM (2014a). Data on entrepreneurship presents the Philippines with an early-stage entrepreneurship (TEA) rate of 18.4%. GEM (2014b) stated that this rate is higher than the average start up rates of Asia and Oceania (13%); which implies that Filipino households, relative to their counterparts in these regions, are more active in self-employment. On the side of constancy, the propensity for members of Filipino households to migrate remains the same. The Philippine economy is characterized by very high migration rates. In fact, the Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO, 2013) estimated that over 10 million Filipinos - or some 10% of the Philippine population - were working abroad in 2013.
format text
author Arguelles, Carlo Anton G.
author_facet Arguelles, Carlo Anton G.
author_sort Arguelles, Carlo Anton G.
title Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
title_short Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
title_full Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
title_fullStr Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
title_full_unstemmed Taking back migrants: A theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in OFW-dependent households
title_sort taking back migrants: a theoretical investigation on the low propensity of entrepreneurship in ofw-dependent households
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2016
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11002
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