The Global Entrepreneurship Index (GEI)
20 years ago there was relatively little entrepreneurial activity in the UK, but now it’s hard to imagine life without James Dyson’s vacuum cleaner, Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook and Simon Cowell’s media empire. Entrepreneurs have changed the way business works and make considerable contributions to national economies and systems of innovation. Formerly know as GEDI, the Global Entrepreneurship Index (GEI) has been developed by researchers at Imperial Business School, George Mason University and the Universities of Strathclyde, Aston and Pecs, to measure and rank a country’s entrepreneurial capacity.
GEI offers a deeper view of the complex interactions of individual and institutional variables that regulate levels of entrepreneurship and economic development. By focusing on the contextual features of entrepreneurship, the IndexÌýcanÌýhelp the policy community to understand the factors contributing to entrepreneurial success. The index has been expanded to coverÌýregional-level analysisÌýand examine gender influences in theÌýFemale Entrepreneurship Index.
TheÌýlatestÌýversion of the IndexÌýcovers over 130 countries and in these webpages you can learn how the GEI can be used as an assessment Ìýtool, view theÌýinteractive GEI Map and develop tangible goals for new policy measures. Further information is available from theÌýGlobal Entrepreneurship and Development InstituteÌýwebsite.