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ENTREPRENEURIAL ATTRIBUTES IN VENEZUELAN MIGRANTS SETTLED IN COLOMBIA

Atributos emprendedores en migrantes venezolanos asentados en Colombia

ABSTRACT

The study analyzes the entrepreneurial attributes of Venezuelan migrants settled in Gramalote (Norte de Santander Department, Colombia) that explain the perception and ability to seize opportunities (as a dependent variable) and the sociodemographic and contextual characteristics (independent variables). The research adopted a positivist paradigm and a quantitative approach to obtain data from a survey conducted with 88 Venezuelan migrants. A bivariate analysis was carried out for data processing, and the categories of variables were grouped to be treated statistically using multinomial logistic regression. It is recommended that public policies on migration for the inclusion of Venezuelan entrepreneurs in Colombia consider the following entrepreneurial attributes: educational level, employment generation, efficiency and quality, compliance and responsibility, information seeking, and support networks since these attributes are associated with the likelihood of perception and capacity to seize business opportunities.

Keywords:
Entrepreneurial attributes; entrepreneurship; Venezuelan migrants; support networks; business opportunities

RESUMEN

El estudio analiza los atributos emprendedores en migrantes venezolanos asentados Gramalote, Departamento Norte de Santander, Colombia que explican la percepción y habilidad para aprovechar oportunidades (como variable dependiente) y las características sociodemográficas y de contexto (variables independientes). Se adoptó un paradigma positivista y enfoque cuantitativo. Los datos provienen de una encuesta aplicada a 88 migrantes venezolanos. Para el tratamiento de los datos se realizó un análisis bivariado y se agruparon las categorías de las variables para ser tratadas estadísticamente mediante una regresión logística multinomial. Se recomienda que las políticas públicas sobre migración, para la inclusión laboral en Colombia, consideren los siguientes atributos de los emprendedores venezolanos: nivel educativo, generación de empleo, eficiencia y calidad, cumplimiento y responsabilidad, búsqueda de información y persuasión, y redes de apoyo porque están asociados con la probabilidad de percepción y capacidad para aprovechar oportunidades de negocio.

Palabras clave:
Atributos emprendedores; emprendimiento; migrantes venezolanos; redes de apoyo; oportunidades de negocio

RESUMO

O estudo analisa os atributos empreendedores dos migrantes venezuelanos instalados em Gramalote, Departamento do Norte de Santander, Colômbia, que explicam a percepção e a capacidade de aproveitar as oportunidades (como variável dependente) e as características sociodemográficas e contextuais (variáveis independentes). Foram adotados um paradigma positivista e uma abordagem quantitativa. Os dados vieram de uma pesquisa com 88 migrantes venezuelanos. Para o processamento de dados, foi realizada uma análise bivariada, e as categorias de variáveis foram agrupadas para serem tratadas estatisticamente por meio de regressão logística multinomial. Recomenda-se que as políticas públicas sobre migração, para inclusão de empreendedores venezuelanos na Colômbia, considerem os seguintes atributos: nível educacional, geração de emprego, eficiência e qualidade, conformidade com normas e responsabilidade, busca de informação e persuasão, e redes de apoio. Esses atributos são recomendados por estarem associados à probabilidade de percepção e capacidade de aproveitar as oportunidades de negócios.

Palavras-chaves:
Atributos empreendedores; empreendedorismo; migrantes venezuelanos; redes de apoio; oportunidades de negócio

INTRODUCTION

Entrepreneurship refers to thinking, reasoning, and acting when searching for business opportunities. It comprises a set of personal attributes necessary to start a new business (Santafé & Tuta, 2016Santafé, A. Y., & Tuta, L. (2016). Competitividad estrategia emprendedora de posicionamiento en instituciones educativas. Editorial Redipe.). According to the literature, entrepreneurs are individuals who seize opportunities that others do not identify. They do not necessarily have the resources to start the business but have the ability to find them (Stevenson & Gumpert, 1985Stevenson, H., & Gumpert, D. (1985). The heart of entrepreneurship. Harvard Business Review, 63(2), 85-94. Retrieved from https://hbr.org/1985/03/the-heart-of-entrepreneurship
https://hbr.org/1985/03/the-heart-of-ent...
). Individuals who exploit an invention, allocate resources, arrange and organize economic activities in scenarios of uncertainty through innovation – e.g., renting and coordinating land, labor, and capital and buying raw materials – although not being the inventors, investors, or capitalists, are also considered entrepreneurs (Ramírez-Martínez et al., 2018Ramírez-Martínez, C., Albornoz-Arias, N., Mazuera-Arias, R., Niño, M. A., Carreño-Paredes, M. T., Castillo Hernández, A. L., ... & Tuta, L. T. (2018). Territorios: Frontera, migración y realidad social. [Territories: Border, migration and social reality]. Retrieved from https://bonga.unisimon.edu.co/bitstream/handle/20.500.12442/3281/Territorios_PDF.pdf?sequence=1
https://bonga.unisimon.edu.co/bitstream/...
; Schumpeter, 1961Schumpeter, J. A. (1961). Entrepreneurial profit. In The theory of economic development (pp. 128-156). Cambridge, USA: Harvard University Press.). They are motivated by internal (interest, self-determination, independence, security, ambition, reciprocity, reaching a goal) and external factors (economic benefits, monetary payment, recognition, external control) (Antonioli et al., 2016Antonioli, D., Nicolli, F., Ramaciotti, L., & Rizzo, H. (2016). The effect of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations on academics’ entrepreneurial intention. Administrative Sciences, 6(4), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci6040015
https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci6040015...
; Carsrud & Brännback, 2011Carsrud, A., & Brännback, M. (2011). Entrepreneurial motivations: What do we still need to know? Journal of Small Business Management, 49(1), 9-26. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-627X.2010.00312.x
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-627X.2010...
; Eijdenberg & Masurel, 2013Eijdenberg, E., & Masurel, E. (2013). Entrepreneurial motivation in a least developed country: Push factors and pull factors among MSEs in Uganda. Journal of Enterprising Culture, 21(1), 19-43. https://doi.org/10.1142/S0218495813500027
https://doi.org/10.1142/S021849581350002...
; Marulanda et al., 2014Marulanda, V. F. Á., Montoya, R. I. A., & Vélez, R. J. M. (2014). Teorías motivacionales en el estudio del emprendimiento. [Motivational theories in the study of entrepreneurship]. Pensamiento y Gestión, (36), 204-236. http://dx.doi.org/10.14482/pege.36.5571
http://dx.doi.org/10.14482/pege.36.5571...
; Moreno & Egusquiza, 2017Moreno, S., & Egusquiza, C. (2017). Características emprendedoras en alumnos de últimos ciclos de la carrera de Administración de Empresas de una Universidad Privada de Lima. [Entrepreneurial characteristics of students in the final cycles of the Business Administration degree at a private university in Lima.]. Retrieved from http://repositorio.usil.edu.pe/handle/USIL/3313
http://repositorio.usil.edu.pe/handle/US...
).

Therefore, identifying personal entrepreneurial attributes allows for determining the profile of a successful entrepreneur, an organized person, planner, risk-taker, intelligent, creative, and a leader (Adie-Villafañe & Cárdenas-Ortiz, 2021Adie-Villafañe, J., & Cárdenas-Ortiz, L.-C. (2021). Perfil y características del emprendedor como aspectos determinantes en el progreso de ideas empresariales. [Profile and characteristics of the entrepreneur as determinants in the progress of business ideas]. Desarrollo Gerencial, 13(1), 1-27. https://doi.org/10.17081/dege.13.1.4219
https://doi.org/10.17081/dege.13.1.4219...
; Sepúlveda et al., 2017Sepúlveda, M. J., Denegri, C. M., Orellana, C. L., Criado, N., Mendoza, J., Salazar, P., & Yung, G. (2017). Características emprendedoras personales y alfabetización económica: Una comparación entre estudiantes universitarios del sur de Chile. [Personal entrepreneurial characteristics and economic literacy: A comparison of university students in southern Chile]. Interdisciplinaria, 34(1), 107-124. Retrieved from https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/180/18052925007.pdf
https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/180/18052925...
). Regarding the study of entrepreneurship in a specific context, Rauch and Frese (2007)Rauch, A., & Frese, M. (2007). Let’s put the person back into entrepreneurship research: A meta-analysis on the relationship between business owners’ personality traits, business creation, and success. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 16(4), 353-385. https://doi.org/10.1080/13594320701595438
https://doi.org/10.1080/1359432070159543...
explain the importance of analyzing the sociodemographic characteristics of the community: age, gender, education, place of residence, and social characteristics such as occupation, family situation, and income. For the authors, together with entrepreneurial attributes, these characteristics determine the individual decision to start an enterprise.

However, the issue of immigrants’ entrepreneurial attributes is a topic with no consensus and little explored in the literature. The paths these entrepreneurs go through are unusual. They have particular skills and connections to migratory and international networks, which are elements that add up to the entrepreneurial attributes outlined in the classic literature (Elo et al., 2018Elo, M., Sandberg, S., Servais, P., Basco, R., Cruz, A. D., Riddle, L., & Täube, F. (2018). Advancing the views on migrant and diaspora entrepreneurs in international entrepreneurship. Journal of International Entrepreneurship, 16(2), 119-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-018-0231-x
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-018-0231-...
). The literature focused on immigrant entrepreneurship or motivation to be an entrepreneur encompasses studies such as Clark and Drinkwater (2010)Clark, K., & Drinkwater, S. (2010). Patterns of ethnic self‐employment in time and space: Evidence from British census microdata. Small Business Economics, 34(3), 323-338. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-008-9122-1
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-008-9122-...
, Gonzalez and Campbell (2018), Levie (2007)Levie, J. (2007). Immigration, in-migration, ethnicity and entrepreneurship in the United Kingdom. Small Business Economics, 28(2-3), 143-169. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-006-9013-2
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-006-9013-...
, Shinnar and Young (2008)Shinnar, R. S., & Young, C. A. (2008). Hispanic immigrant entrepreneurs in the Las Vegas metropolitan area: Motivations for entry into and outcomes of self-employment. Journal of Small Business Management, 46(2), 242-262. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-627X.2008.00242.x
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-627X.2008...
, and Tienda and Raijman (2004)Tienda, M., & Raijman, R. (2004). Promoting Hispanic immigrant entrepreneurship in Chicago. Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship, 9(1), 1-22..

Another study on immigrant entrepreneurship worth mentioning is Mazuera-Arias, Albornoz-Arias, Peraza et al. (2019)Mazuera-Arias, R., Albornoz-Arias, N., Morffe Peraza, M. A. M., Ramírez-Martínez, C., & Carreño-Paredes, M. T. (2019, Abril 8-Maio 5). Informe de movilidad humana venezolana II. Realidades y perspectivas de quienes emigran. [Venezuelan Human Mobility Report II. Realities and perspectives of those who migrate]. San Cristóbal, Venezuela: SJR – Centro Gumilla – UCAT – IIES-UCAB. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12442/4621
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12442/4621...
, which examined a sample of 12957 Venezuelan migrants. The authors conducted a survey and found that 86.2% left their country to seek new and better job opportunities, 69.3% left to help their family economically, and 43.3% planned to start their own business in the host country. The study shows that the migrant’s entrepreneurial spirit and the environmental conditions and facilities to start a business are elements that attract migrants to a host country (Eijdenberg & Masurel, 2013Eijdenberg, E., & Masurel, E. (2013). Entrepreneurial motivation in a least developed country: Push factors and pull factors among MSEs in Uganda. Journal of Enterprising Culture, 21(1), 19-43. https://doi.org/10.1142/S0218495813500027
https://doi.org/10.1142/S021849581350002...
). The host country benefits from migration since these entrepreneurs pay taxes, contribute to the social security and pension funds systems, and offer opportunities for self-employment and formal employment, as well as assisting the development of the migrant’s country of origin since individuals send remittances (Elo et al., 2018Elo, M., Sandberg, S., Servais, P., Basco, R., Cruz, A. D., Riddle, L., & Täube, F. (2018). Advancing the views on migrant and diaspora entrepreneurs in international entrepreneurship. Journal of International Entrepreneurship, 16(2), 119-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-018-0231-x
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-018-0231-...
; Elo & Dana, 2019Elo, M., & Dana, L. P. (2019). Embeddedness and entrepreneurial traditions: Entrepreneurship of Bukharian Jews in diaspora. Journal of Family Business Management. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFBM-03-2019-0016
https://doi.org/10.1108/JFBM-03-2019-001...
; Sinkovics & Reuber, 2021Sinkovics, N., & Reuber, A. R. (2021). Beyond disciplinary silos: A systematic analysis of the migrant entrepreneurship literature. Journal of World Business, 56(4), 101223. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2021.101223
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2021.10122...
).

Therefore, this article focuses on entrepreneurial attributes and internal motivational factors of Venezuelan migrants settled in Colombia. The study considers the characteristics of successful entrepreneurs proposed by McClelland (1961McClelland, D. (1961). The achieving society. Princeton, USA: Van Nostrand., 1965McClelland, D. (1965). Thinking ahead: Achievement motivation can be developed. Harvard Business Review, 7-24., 1987McClelland, D. C. (1987). Characteristics of successful entrepreneurs. Journal of Creative Behavior, 21(3), 219-233. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2162-6057.1987.tb00479.x
https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2162-6057.1987...
) and personal entrepreneurial characteristics portrayed by Bayas (2015), examining drivers that lead individuals to start a business. These attributes were organized into three groups (Figure 1).

Figure 1
Personal entrepreneurial characteristics

The objective of this study was to answer the following research question: What are the entrepreneurial attributes of Venezuelan migrants settled in Gramlote (Norte de Santander Department, Colombia) that explain the perception and ability to seize opportunities?

The null hypothesis (H0) was that there is no significant relationship or association between demographic and contextual factors (entrepreneurial attributes) of Venezuelan migrant entrepreneurs and their perception and ability to seize opportunities. Thus, the alternative hypothesis (H1) was that there is significant evidence of a relationship or association between demographic and contextual factors (entrepreneurial attributes) of Venezuelan migrant entrepreneurs and their perception and ability to seize opportunities.

The study used a quantitative approach and data from a structured survey applied to 88 Venezuelan migrants over 18 years old, entrepreneurs of businesses located in the urban area of Gramalote, Norte de Santander Department, Colombia. The dataset is publicly accessible (Albornoz-Arias & Santafé-Rojas, 2022Albornoz-Arias, N., & Santafé-Rojas, A.-K. (2022). Entrepreneurial attributes of Venezuelan migrants in Gramalote, Norte de Santander, Colombia. Mendeley Data, V1. https://doi.org/10.17632/9w26bzjzrw.1
https://doi.org/10.17632/9w26bzjzrw.1...
). Data processing was conducted using descriptive analysis, and a bivariate analysis was performed between the dependent variable “perception and ability to seize opportunities” against eight entrepreneurial attributes proposed in Figure 1. A multinomial logistic regression model was fitted to determine the mutual relationships between the dependent and independent variables, where the likelihood of an event occurring given the following set of independent variables was estimated:

  • Sociodemographic: gender, age groups, educational level, area of knowledge, employment generation.

  • Contextual (entrepreneurial attributes).

ENTREPRENEURIAL ATTRIBUTES

Individuals who start their businesses seek independence and improvement of their economic stability. Some studies explore entrepreneurial characteristics leading individuals to self-employ or generate employment. Table 1 shows the entrepreneurial attributes from the literature.

Table 1
Personal entrepreneurial attributes according to the literature

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Context of the Venezuelan migration phenomenon and target population

Venezuelan migration is considered the largest human mobilization in Latin America. This movement encompasses documented and undocumented migrants, some of whom count on support from migration networks in the destination country (Mazuera-Arias, Albornoz-Arias, Superlano et al., 2019Mazuera-Arias, R., Albornoz-Arias, N., Superlano J. J. Z., Morffe Peraza, M. A. M. (2019, Abril 8-Maio 5). Perfiles sociodemográficos de la migración venezolana, principales características según país receptor. [Socio-demographic profiles of Venezuelan migration, main characteristics according to receiving country]. San Cristóbal, Venezuela – Servicio Jesuita a Refugiados (SJR). Centro Gumilla – UCAT – IIES-UCAB. Retrieved from http://bonga.unisimon.edu.co/handle/20.500.12442/4675
http://bonga.unisimon.edu.co/handle/20.5...
). Numbers obtained on August 5, 2021, show 5,667,835 Venezuelan migrants around the world, of which 4,621,562 living in other countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, mainly in Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador (R4V, 2021R4V. (2021, Agosto 5). Refugiados y migrantes de Venezuela [Venezuelan migrants and refugees]. Interagency Coordination Platform for Refugees and Migrants from Venezuela. Retrieved from https://www.r4v.info/es/refugiadosymigrantes
https://www.r4v.info/es/refugiadosymigra...
; United Nations Refugee Agency, 2019aUnited Nations Refugee Agency. (2019a). Plan de respuesta regional para refugiados y migrantes de Venezuela. [Regional response plan for refugees and migrants from Venezuela]. Colombia. Retrieved from https://www.refworld.org.es/pdfid/5cbe52304.pdf
https://www.refworld.org.es/pdfid/5cbe52...
; World Bank, 2019World Bank. (2019). La migración venezolana, más allá de las fronteras. [Venezuelan migration, beyond borders]. Colombia. Retrieved from https://www.bancomundial.org/es/region/lac/brief/la-migracion-venezolana-mas-alla-de-las-fronteras
https://www.bancomundial.org/es/region/l...
). They left Venezuela due to a humanitarian and economic crisis that has severely deteriorated the living standards in the country.

Venezuelan migration has also impacted other countries, such as Brazil, particularly at the border between Santa Elena de Guairén (Venezuela) and Pacaraima (Brazil). During the COVID-19 pandemic, Ordinance 655 of June 23, 2021, published by the Brazilian federal government, allowed the entry of Venezuelan migrants for humanitarian reasons and the migratory regularization of Venezuelans who entered the country (United Nations Refugee Agency, 2019bUnited Nations Refugee Agency. (2019b). Entrada y regularización migratoria de venezolanos en Brasil. [Entry and regularisation of Venezuelan migrants in Brazil]. Retrieved from https://help.unhcr.org/brazil/es/coronavirus-3/coronavirus-transito-e-fronteiras/entrada-y-regularizacion-migratoria-de-venezolanos-en-brasil/
https://help.unhcr.org/brazil/es/coronav...
).

In December 2020, Colombia hosted 37% of the Venezuelan migrants worldwide, a total of 1,729,537 people. Of these, 51% were men, and 55.9% were undocumented (Migración Colombia, 2020Migración Colombia. (2020). Distribución de venezolanos en Colombia 2020. Retrieved from https://migracioncolombia.gov.co/infografias/distribucion-venezolanos-en-colombia-corte-a-31-de-diciembre
https://migracioncolombia.gov.co/infogra...
). In the Colombian department of Norte de Santander – Northeast of Colombia, bordering Venezuela – there were 187,854 migrants from Venezuela (or 10.86% of the total in Colombia). The department/state comprises 40 municipalities, and the municipality of Gramalote examined in this study counted 194 Venezuelan migrants registered by the authorities (0.1% of the Venezuelan migrants in the department) (Migración Colombia, 2020Migración Colombia. (2020). Distribución de venezolanos en Colombia 2020. Retrieved from https://migracioncolombia.gov.co/infografias/distribucion-venezolanos-en-colombia-corte-a-31-de-diciembre
https://migracioncolombia.gov.co/infogra...
).

The data

Data were obtained from a structured instrument applied to 88 Venezuelan migrants over 18 years of age, entrepreneurs of businesses in the urban area of Gramalote, municipality of the Norte de Santander Department, Colombia. The population consulted for this study represents 45.36% of all migrants registered by the local authorities.

A descriptive analysis was used to process the data, followed by a bivariate analysis examining the relationship between the dependent variable, “perception and ability to seize opportunities,” and each of the independent variables (sociodemographic and contextual variables, or “entrepreneurial attributes”), using Fisher’s exact test, at a confidence level of 5%. Kendall’s tau-b test was performed to measure the direction of the relationship in those variables that showed evidence of statistically significant association. Finally, a multinomial logistic regression model was fitted to determine the mutual relationships between the dependent and independent variables, where the probability of an event occurring given a set of explanatory variables was estimated. Data processing and analysis were carried out using SPSS.

The variables

The variables were regrouped and recoded to be treated statistically by multinomial logistic regression, defining as the dependent variable “perception and ability to seize opportunities,” determined by the response categories: 1= low, 2= medium, 3 = high.

The following were defined as independent variables:

  • Sociodemographic: Gender (dichotomous variable): 0= Female, 1= Male; Age groups: 1= 18 to 34 years, 2= 35 to 49 years, 3= over 50 years; Educational level (dichotomous variable): 0= High school or less, 1= Technician and professional; Area of knowledge: 1= Administration/Accounting, 2= Law, 3= Engineering, 4= Technical, 5=Other; Generates employment (dichotomous variable): 0= No, 1= Yes.

  • Contextual (business attributes, determined by response categories: 1= low, 2= medium, 3 = high). Taking risks: 1= Low, 2= Medium, 3 = High; Demanding efficiency and quality: 1= Low, 2= Medium, 3 = High; Persistence and compliance: 1= Low, 2= Medium, 3 = High; Information seeking: 1= Low , 2= Medium, 3= High; Setting goals: 1= Low , 2= Medium, 3 = High; Building support networks (persuasion): 1= Low , 2= Medium, 3 = High; Having self-confidence: 1= Low , 2= Medium, 3 = High.

The model used in the study

A multinomial logistic regression model was fitted to determine the relationship of the characteristics between the dependent and independent variables. The probability of an event occurring given a set of explanatory variables, represented by the general expression, was estimated:

(1) Prob ( Y i = j / x ) = e β k j X k i 1 + k = 1 j e β k j X k i para j = 1 , 2 , 3

Where Y represents the dependent variable (the level of perception and ability to seize opportunities), which takes the values of 1, 2, and 3, low, medium, or high, respectively; Xk the vector of k independent or explanatory variables and βkj=β0j ..βlj ….βkj which includes intercept β0j, the vector of coefficients to be estimated for the effect of Xk on choice j.

For the analysis and estimation of the model, the maximum likelihood method was used, considering the point where the log-likelihood is maximized through repeated iterations until reaching the point where the parameter value converges.

Characteristics of migrants according to the perception and ability to seize opportunities

Tables 2 and 3 show the percentage distribution of migrants according to the dependent variable “perception and ability to seize opportunities.” Of the total number of entrepreneurs, 8% (7) had low levels of perception and ability to seize opportunities, while 51.1% (45) had medium levels, and 40.9% (36) presented high levels.

Table 2
Sociodemographic characteristics of the sample
Table 3
Context characteristics

Bivariate analysis

In order to have a first approximation of the possible relationships between the dependent variable, “perception and ability to seize opportunities,” and each independent variable, the Fischer exact test was applied at a significance level of 5%. In the case of nominal variables, Cramer’s V test for the strength of association and Kendall’s Tau-b test for the strength and direction of association were used (the latter in the case of ordinal variables).

Table 4 shows the test results for the demographic variables. The variables gender, age groups, educational level, and area of knowledge showed no evidence of a statistically significant relationship (p > 0.05), while the variable generates employment showed a statistically significant relationship (p < 0.05) with the dependent variable perception and ability to seize opportunities.

Table 4
Direction and association statistics. Sociodemographic variables

Table 5 presents the test results for the context variables (entrepreneurial attributes). According to Kendall’s Tau-b statistic, all the entrepreneurial attributes showed a statistically significant relationship with the dependent variable (p < 0.05), i.e., increasing the level of each of these variables increases the perception and ability to seize opportunities.

Table 5
Direction and association stats. Context variables

Model of factors associated with entrepreneurial intention

Table 6 shows the summary of the model, where it is evident that the model is adequate for the fit of the data. The log-likelihood (-2LL) or deviance statistic of 37.693 is significant (p = 0.00) and measures the extent to which the model fits the data. The Cox and Snell Pseudo R-squared estimated 0.694, which indicates that 69.4% of the proportion of the dependent variable variance is explained by the variation of the independent variables in the model. On the other hand, the Nagelkerke Pseudo R-squared statistic (corrected version of Cox and Snell’s Pseudo R-squared) indicates that the model’s independent variables explain 82.8% of the proportion of variance of the dependent variable.

Table 6
Summary of the model

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Table 7 presents the results of the multinomial logit model where the pooled analysis is found. In the interpretation of the odds ratios of each variable, it is assumed that the rest of the independent variables remain fixed. In this case, each of the independent variables is interpreted between the low and high levels of perception, taking the medium level of perception as a reference (categories or average level of responses of the variable).

Table 7
Regression coefficients for the multinomial logistic model

Concerning the option medium level (2) of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category or standardized to zero) related to the independent variables educational level, generates employment, demanding efficiency and quality, compliance, and information seeking, no evidence was observed of statistically significant relationship with low-level entrepreneurs (3). Also, there was no evidence of a statistically significant relationship between the independent variables and an increase in the likelihood of an entrepreneur presenting a high level (1) of perception and ability to seize opportunities scale.

These results suggest that educated and qualified entrepreneurs are more likely to be self-employed and find formal employment (Cruz et al., 2018Cruz, E. P., Falcao, R. P. Q., & Barreto, C. R. (2018). Exploring the evolution of ethnic entrepreneurship: The case of Brazilian immigrants in Florida. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, 24(5), 971-993. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-08-2016-0239
https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-08-2016-02...
), as opposed to the labor force of low-skilled migrants who are mainly placed in other low-paying jobs. In Colombia, skilled and unskilled Venezuelan migrants have found barriers to enter the formal labor market due to the temporary nature of migration documents, irregular migration, difficulties in validating professional qualifications, lack of knowledge about labor recruitment processes, barriers to accessing social protection networks and formalizing enterprises (Castro, 2020Castro, P. M. (2020). Inclusión laboral de la población migrante venezolana en Colombia: Situación laboral y dificultades en el proceso de inserción. [Labour inclusion of the Venezuelan migrant population in Colombia Labour: Situation and difficulties in the integration process]. Equilibrium – Centro para el Desarrollo Económico (CenDE).).

Effects

With respect to educational level, the coefficient (b = 1.440) is associated with the likelihood that the entrepreneur has a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities. The odds ratio = 4.221 indicates the likelihood of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities compared to an entrepreneur in the medium level of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category), i.e., it increases by 4.22 times as the level of education, High School or less, increases by one unit. Education represents human capital, which is an important factor in predicting entrepreneurial activities (Liu et al., 2018Liu, C. Y., Ye, L., & Feng, B. (2018). Migrant entrepreneurship in China: Entrepreneurial transition and firm performance. Small Business Economics, 52(3), 681-696. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-017-9979-y
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-017-9979-...
). The literature has found that people who start businesses are more educated than those who do not (Kimosop et al., 2016Kimosop, J., Korir, M., & White, M. (2016). The moderating effect of demographic characteristics on the relationship between strategic capabilities and firm performance in women‐owned entrepreneurial ventures in Nairobi, Kenya. Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences/Revue Canadienne des Sciences de l’Administration, 33(3), 242-256. https://doi.org/10.1002/cjas.1399
https://doi.org/10.1002/cjas.1399...
) and are more innovative. Also, entrepreneurship is related to skills, knowledge, and confidence in recognizing opportunities, with formal education being the most influential on entrepreneurial intention because it motivates actions and behaviors to start a business (Jafari-Sadeghi et al., 2020Jafari-Sadeghi, V., Nkongolo-Bakenda, J. M., Dana, L. P., Anderson, R. B., & Biancone, P. P. (2020). Home country institutional context and entrepreneurial internationalization: The significance of human capital attributes. Journal of International Entrepreneurship, 18(2), 165-195. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-019-00264-1
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10843-019-00264...
).

For the medium-level option of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category), the variable “does not generate employment” presents a negative coefficient (b = -4.124), which is associated with a low likelihood that the entrepreneur has a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities. The inverse of the odd ratio (o Expo(b)), = 61.85, indicates that an entrepreneur who generates employment is 61.85 times more likely to have a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities. This result coincides with the position of Duarte and Ruíz (2009)Duarte, T., & Ruíz, T. M. (2009). Emprendimiento, una opción para el desarrollo [Entrepreneurship, an option for development]. Scientia et Technica, 15(43), 326-331. Retrieved from https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/849/84917310058.pdf
https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/849/84917310...
and Formichella (2004)Formichella, M. (2004). El concepto de emprendimiento y su relación con la educación, el empleo y el desarrollo local (Monografía realizada en el marco de la Beca de Iniciación del INTA: “Gestión del emprendimiento y la innovación” [The concept of entrepreneurship and its relationship with education, employment and local development. Monograph carried out in the framework of the INTA Starting Grant: “Entrepreneurship and innovation management”] Buenos Aires, Argentina). Retrieved from https://www.t-educa.cl/descargas/pdfs_portal/emprendimiento/emprendydesarrollolocal.pdf
https://www.t-educa.cl/descargas/pdfs_po...
when they point out that from the idea of development to the local development theory, individuals must have the possibility to develop production processes that allow them to generate self-employment and wealth, as well as employment for others.

For the medium level of the scale of perception and ability to seize opportunities (reference category), the negative coefficient (b = -3.247) of a medium level of demanding efficiency and quality is associated with a low likelihood that the entrepreneur presents a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities, the quotient = 25.72, indicates that an increase by one unit of a medium level of demanding efficiency and quality increases the odds of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities by 25 times more than migrants with a medium level of the dependent variable. This result reveals that this entrepreneurial attribute focuses on starting a business to improve living conditions. However, the quality of self-efficiency, which is related to the control of entrepreneurial behavior (Shapero, 1985Shapero, A. T. (1985). The entrepreneurial event. College of Administrative Science, Ohio State University.), in the case of Venezuelan migrants, leads these people toward a behavior under which they aspire to a viable and credible business.

Regarding the medium level of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category), the negative coefficient (b = -1.981) of a medium level of compliance and responsibility is associated with a low chance of the entrepreneur having a high level of the dependent variable. The quotient = 7.25 indicates that the chances of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities increase by 7.25 times as the average level of compliance increases by one unit. Compliance characterizes people with a high need for achievement (Robbins, 1999Robbins, S. (1999). Comportamiento organizacional, teoría y práctica (3ra ed.). México: Prentice Hall Hispanoamericana S.A.).

For the medium level of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category), the negative coefficient (b = -2.167) of a medium level of information seeking is associated with a low likelihood that the entrepreneur has a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities. The ratio = 8.73 indicates that a one unit increase in medium level of information seeking increases the odds of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities by 8.73 times more than migrants with medium level of perception and ability to seize opportunities. The results show that the event of an entrepreneur with a medium level of contextual information and a low likelihood of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities occurs due to a predisposition to take risks by starting a business abroad. According to Gnyawali and Forgel (19 9 4), the information entrepreneurs should know in this situation refers to government policies and procedures and how to obtain financial and non-financial assistance.

About the medium level of the perception and ability to seize opportunities scale (reference category) the negative coefficient (b= -2.021) of a medium level of building support networks (persuasion) is associated with a low likelihood of the entrepreneur having a high level of the dependent variable. The ratio = 7.54 indicates that a one unit increase in the medium level of building support networks (persuasion) increases the chances of having a high level of perception and ability to seize opportunities by 7.54 times more than migrants with a medium level of the dependent variable. Adaptation of the migrant entrepreneur to the host country context, brain drain, and gain for the home and host country are typical processes in migration contexts (Elo et al., 2019Elo, M., Täube, F., & Volovelsky, E. K. (2019). Migration “against the tide”: Location and Jewish diaspora entrepreneurs. Regional Studies, 53(1), 95-106. https://doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2018.1549359
https://doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2018.15...
). This finding suggests that a foreign entrepreneur who decided to start a business gained credibility and trust from customers in an unfamiliar market. However, they must appeal for support networks, social connections, and a source of resources (Elo & Dana, 2019Elo, M., & Dana, L. P. (2019). Embeddedness and entrepreneurial traditions: Entrepreneurship of Bukharian Jews in diaspora. Journal of Family Business Management. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFBM-03-2019-0016
https://doi.org/10.1108/JFBM-03-2019-001...
; Gnyawali & Forgel, 1994Gnyawali, D. R., & Fogel, D. S. (1994). Environments for entrepreneurship development: Key dimensions and research implications. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 18(4), 43-62. https://doi.org/10.1177/104225879401800403
https://doi.org/10.1177/1042258794018004...
).

CONCLUSIONS

This study reveals that Venezuelan entrepreneurs are characterized by their level of education, capacity to generate employment, demanding efficiency and quality, compliance, information seeking, and building support networks. These are the variables associated with the likelihood of perceiving and seizing business opportunities.

However, Venezuelan migrants in the Norte de Santander Department face a context of high unemployment and informality, few formal job opportunities, and obstacles to obtaining financing. Against this backdrop, they resort to informal self-employment since they do not know the legal norms about registering a business (Semana, 2020Semana. (2020). Emprendimiento de los migrantes venezolanos en Colombia [Enterprises of Venezuelan migrants in Colombia. Observatory of the Venezuelan Migration Project]. USAID, Semana, AcdiVoca, Semana Rural, Bogotá. https://migravenezuela.com/web/articulo/emprendimientos-venezolanos-en-colombia/2055 (accessed on 18 October 2021).
https://migravenezuela.com/web/articulo/...
).

Migration policy must consider the need to comply with the regulation of migrants, especially in a post-pandemic and cross-border context (Elo et al., 2022Elo, M., Täuben F. A., & Servais, P. (2022). Who is doing “transnational diaspora entrepreneurship”? Understanding formal identity and status. Journal of World Business, 57(1), 101240. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2021.101240
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2021.10124...
). In this case, the Colombian government must include in public policies the support of sustainable livelihood projects of migrant entrepreneurs, free technical support, and a simplified path to register businesses in the Chamber of Commerce, making access to financing for viable projects more flexible, motivating the generation of formal employment and self-employment, and contributing to the development of the state through the payment of social security and taxes.

Finally, the main contributions of this research consist of the literature review on entrepreneurial attributes or characteristics and identifying such attributes in migrant entrepreneurs. It is a pioneering quantitative study that works with primary data collected from Venezuelan migrants in Colombia and offers guidelines supporting the country’s policies.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    27 Mar 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    30 Apr 2021
  • Accepted
    11 Oct 2022
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