'This important book breaks new ground in making the case for the important role that public policy can and does play. The book explains not only why entrepreneurship policy matters but also provides a compelling blueprint for formulating and implementing policies promoting entrepreneurship and small business.'
David B. Audretsch, Professor, Indiana University, USA
'The revival of entrepreneurship since the 1990s is perhaps the biggest and most unexpected change in the industrial structure of the last century. Policy makers were ahead of scholars to discover its pervasiveness and its opportunities. Their public policies have been well meant but highly intuitive, largely based upon nurturing irrespective of the cost, and neglecting specific situations. Bob Bennett's book is the first to unravel the why's and how's of public policy covering many periods and countries. It is a definitive must read for those who want to learn from past policies and prepare future ones.'
Roy Thurik, Professor, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands
'This highly readable book is the definitive guide to why entrepreneurship is important and the ways in which public policy intervention can assist or impede the small business sector. A model of clarity, this book is recommended reading for students - and should be on the desks of every politician and economic policy advisor.'
Sara Carter, Professor, University of Strathclyde, UK
'Governments throughout the developed world spend huge sums in seeking to make their country more enterprising. It is therefore timely for Professor Robert Bennett, a long-term observer of such policies, to coolly review their effectiveness and provide twelve well-chosen recommendations for improvement.'
David Storey, Professor, School of Business Management and Economics, University of Sussex, UK
'Entrepreneurship, Small Business and Public Policy: Evolution and Revolution, by Robert J. Bennett, bridges the gap between hopeful pronouncements of public policy and the realities of how small business and entrepreneurship programs might affect their intended client bases, and succeeds as a sensible, unruffled examination of a complex topic.'
Christopher L. Atkinson, Florida Atlantic University, Economic Development Quarterly