Abstract
The pace of transition to a market economy has been slower in Bulgaria than in some other east European countries in the 1990s. Output levels in the state owned sector, which has not yet been subject to mass privatisation, have fallen sharply and there has been a dramatic increase in unemployment. There has however also been a rapid growth in the number of small firms, and the ability of this sector to generate new jobs will be an important component of labour market dynamics in the future. Some of the main characteristics of this emergent sector are identified on the basis of a sample survey of nearly 400 small Bulgarian firms, covering competitiveness, entrepreneurship, innovation, networking, labour relations and business performance of the small firms. Key features of a subset of small firms with an orientation towards employment growth are identified.
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Bartlett, W., Rangelova, R. Small Firms and Economic Transformation in Bulgaria. Small Business Economics 9, 319–333 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1007991832246
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1007991832246