The Effects of Business Incubator Programs of Government and Universities on College Students’ Entrepreneurial Intention of Technology Start-Ups: Entrepreneurship and Perception of the Fourth Industrial Revolution as the Mediators

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-172
Author(s):  
Sangphil Won ◽  
◽  
KeunTae Cho ◽  

The technology transformative impact on financial services has been signalled and has been cited as major catalyst in what economist are citing as Fourth Industrial Revolution. The financial services, a vital catalytic role in facilitating the economic transformation and growth of Malaysian economic has been enriched by financial transformation. Fintech is the prominent example of financial transformation and innovative solutions for financial services to stay ahead along with Fourth Industrial Revolution. The generation of the ideas behind this transformation and innovation are an outcome from ideas and intention of individuals. Entrepreneurial Intention (EI) form the attention, experience and action toward an idea to become manifest. The Fintech “ideas” may not become reality without Fintech based entrepreneurs’ EI. The intentionality concept has been constantly debated by modern theorist, addressing the important aspects of intention to sustain value or effort despite of interruptions. However, the state of Malaysian Entrepreneurial Intention has devoted to the increasing studies on Entrepreneurial Intention among Malaysian while the Malaysian EI is among the lowest within Asia & Oceania Efficiency-driven economies. Hence, this study combines retrospection of critical realism with a single case study to provide deep description on question studied


Author(s):  
Keun Lee

Latecomer economies are firms which may be able to leapfrog older vintages of technology, and make pre-emptive investments in emerging technologies to catch up with advanced countries in new markets. Leapfrogging can be defined as latecomers trying something different ahead of the forerunners, thereby leaping over them. The answer to the question whether the fourth industrial revolution represents a new window of opportunity for leapfrogging or whether it constitutes a source of further risks for latecomers is that this depends entirely on the country’s response and readiness, that is, its industrial policy, digital literacy, the skill and education level, as well as domestic market size and position in the GVC. Policy recommendations for leapfrogging can also be made for different types of firms, such as incumbents and start-ups. The former comprises three types of firms, namely leaders, followers, and laggards. Path-creating type leapfrogging is more likely to take place in start-ups because they have invested the least in existing technologies or business models. Leader or follower type firms in emerging economies tend to have some experience with technology and absorptive capacity and are thus likely to be in a position to skip one or several stages, while managing the risks associated with leapfrogging. Lastly, laggard firms should not attempt pre-mature leapfrogging but should first build some absorptive capacity in their niche area and upgrade by moving up the higher end of the GVC.


Author(s):  
Klaus Schwab

The rapid pace of technological developments played a key role in the previous industrial revolutions. However, the fourth industrial revolution (Industry 4.0) and its embedded technology diffusion progress is expected to grow exponentially in terms of technical change and socioeconomic impact. Therefore, coping with such transformation require a holistic approach that encompasses innovative and sustainable system solutions and not just technological ones. In this article, we propose a framework that can facilitate the interaction between technological and social innovation to continuously come up with proactive, and hence timely, sustainable strategies. These strategies can leverage economic rewards, enrich society at large, and protect the environment. The new forthcoming opportunities that will be generated through the next industrial wave are gigantic at all levels. However, the readiness for such revolutionary conversion require coupling the forces of technological innovation and social innovation under the sustainability umbrella.


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