Credit culture and entrepreneurship.

dc.contributor.authorM. Azizur Rahman
dc.date.accessioned2025-04-22T07:29:12Z
dc.date.issued2011-12-21
dc.description.abstractThe article "Credit Culture and Entrepreneurship" by M. Azizur Rahman examines the critical role of accessible credit in fostering entrepreneurial growth, emphasizing long-term loans as more conducive to business sustainability than short-term financing despite higher cumulative costs. The author identifies entrepreneurs—driven by innovation, risk-taking, and opportunity exploitation—as key to economic development, with their success influenced by family background, education, and social environment. Highlighting systemic challenges like high interest rates and stringent collateral requirements, the piece advocates for government subsidies, liberalized loan terms, and corruption reduction to enhance credit accessibility. Paradoxically, it notes that some "productive corruption" (e.g., expediting processes via "seed money") in East Asian economies has coexisted with robust entrepreneurship. The article concludes that a balanced credit culture, combining affordable financing with minimal bureaucratic hurdles, is essential for nurturing entrepreneurship and industrial progress.
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.uttarauniversity.edu.bd:4000/handle/123456789/258
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherDaily Financial Express
dc.subjectEntrepreneurship development
dc.subjectlong-term credit
dc.subjectloan accessibility
dc.subjectinterest rate subsidies
dc.subjectcollateral requirements
dc.subjectproductive corruption
dc.subjectEast Asian Tigers
dc.subjecteconomic growth
dc.subjectgovernment policy
dc.subjectfinancial institutions.
dc.subjectM. Azizur Rahman
dc.titleCredit culture and entrepreneurship.
dc.typeArticle

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