posted on 2023-08-30, 14:45authored byIsabella Hatak, Rainer Harms, Matthias Fink
The purpose of this paper is to examine how age and job identification affect entrepreneurial intention. We draw on a representative sample of the Austrian population and apply binary logistic regression on entrepreneurial intention. We find that as employees age they are less inclined to act entrepreneurially, and that their entrepreneurial intention is lower the more they identify with their job. Whereas gender, education, and previous entrepreneurial experience matter, leadership and having entrepreneurial parents seem to have no impact on the entrepreneurial intention of employees. Research implications relate to a contingency perspective on entrepreneurial intention where the impact of age is exacerbated by stronger identification with the job. Practical implications include the need to account for different motivational backgrounds when addressing entrepreneurial employees of different ages. Societal implications include the need to adopt an age perspective to foster entrepreneurial intentions within established organizations. While our study corroborates and extends findings from entrepreneurial intention research, we contribute new empirical insights to the age and job-dependent contingency perspective.