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Macroeconomic Determinants and the Necessity-Opportunity Divide in India’s Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
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Keywords

Entrepreneurship
Growth
India
Innovation
Necessity
Trade openness

Categories

How to Cite

Chakraborty, S., & Nath, S. K. (2026). Macroeconomic Determinants and the Necessity-Opportunity Divide in India’s Entrepreneurial Ecosystem. South India Journal of Social Sciences, 24(1), 30-34. https://doi.org/10.62656/

Abstract

Entrepreneurship is a driver of economic transformation, yet in developing economies like India, its growth remains divided between necessity- and opportunity-driven motives. This study quantitatively examines whether India’s entrepreneurship growth is primarily shaped by necessity or opportunity, and how different macroeconomic determinants influence this dynamic. A multivariate time-series regression analysis is carried out by using secondary data from 2013 to 2023. Findings reveal that necessity-driven entrepreneurship and trade openness exert a significant positive impact on the growth of entrepreneurship, while economic distress, proxied by the misery index, exhibits a dampening effect. The dominance of necessity-driven entrepreneurship persists in India due to labour market rigidities, weak social safety nets, and limited formal employment avenues that push individuals into self-employment out of compulsion rather than choice, especially during economic downturns. By drawing on global best practices like South Korea’s ‘Credit Guarantee Agency,’ the study finally underscores the need to integrate entrepreneurship promotion within employment and skill development strategies to strengthen credit guarantee mechanisms for enterprises, enhance access to finance, and align trade-orientated policies like ‘Make in India’ with export-linked incentives, so that the country can transition from necessity-driven ventures into a more resilient, innovation-driven entrepreneurial ecosystem.

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