Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship (Jan 2024)

Former Soviet Union middle class: how entrepreneurs are shaping a new stratum and pattern of socio-economic behavior

  • Elmira Otar,
  • Rinat Salikzhanov,
  • Aigul Akhmetova,
  • Assel Issakhanova,
  • Kuralay Mukhambetova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13731-023-00356-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract The purpose of this study is to create a representative socio-economic profile of entrepreneurs operating in the former Soviet Union (FSU) states as a pillar of the new middle-class stratum. This study explored middle-class entrepreneurship from multiple perspectives, encompassing statistical analysis of microdata about households and firms. The aim was to gauge entrepreneurship within a national framework and examine its associations with social and economic factors. The study adopted the Doing Business tool as a novel paradigm to establish a quantitative correlation between the economic system in the post-Soviet space and the investigated variables. The analysis revealed that prospective entrepreneurs are members of the younger generation between the ages of 25 and 34; a critical factor in the development of entrepreneurship is highly educated human capital; and typical representatives of entrepreneurship intending to operate in the FSU states establish their own business as a means of subsistence, not as a means of advancement in the social stratum. In general, an entrepreneur of the middle class in the new economies of the post-Soviet space does not demonstrate a high level of entrepreneurial activity and, as a pillar of the middle-class stratum, is in the formation stage.

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