
“The push for entrepreneurial development emerged in the 1980s as both a reaction to protracted recession and an alternative to faulty business-attraction strategies that were not meeting the needs of states and their inner cities, smaller towns, and citizens,” Collins writes. But that recession, which reduced rural manufacturing jobs and lowered standards of living, also left such places less appealing to businesses. Rural entrepreneurship can provdie a foundation for such areas to fall back on.
The key, Collins says, is balance between recruting industry and the sort of entrepreneurship that creates a strong, business-owning middle class. Promoting entrepreneurship moves a community toward a more balanced economy. “Towns need the amenities of limited-growth, local entrepreneurs before they can even dream of attracting new firms of any size,” Collins writes. “Rural entrepreneurship is more than grasping at straws. A business-owning middle class is essential to rural sustainability.” (Read more)
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