Gender, formality, and entrepreneurial success
New published paper by Lars Ivar Oppedal Berge and Armando José Garcia Pires in the Small Business Economics Journal, titled "Gender, formality, and entrepreneurial success"
Lars Ivar Oppedal Berge is an economist who has been in his current position as associate professor of Business Economics at NHH since 2015. He received his PhD in Economics from NHH in 2011. Berge’s research has focused on entrepreneurship, firm growth and microfinance, using various forms of experimental methods. His work has appeared in journals such as Management Science, Journal of the European Economic Association and Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. Currently, he is involved in research projects on women’s empowerment and entrepreneurship, CSR, money laundering, and misreporting within firms.
Berge’s present teaching areas are management accounting and behavioral economics.
Author(s) | Title | Publisher |
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Bjorvatn, Kjetil; Galle, Simon; Berge, Lars Ivar Oppedal; Miguel, Edward; Posner, Daniel; Tungodden, Bertil; Zhang, Kelly | Elections and selfishness | Electoral Studies: an international journal on voting and electoral systems and strategy Volume 69; page 1 - 6; 2021 |
Berge, Lars Ivar Oppedal; Garcia Pires, Armando Jose | Measuring Spillover Effects from an Entrepreneurship Programme: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Tanzania | Journal of Development Studies Volume 57 (10); page 1755 - 1775; 2021 |
Berge, Lars Ivar Oppedal; Bjorvatn, Kjetil; Galle, Simon; Miguel, Edward; Posner, Daniel; Tungodden, Bertil; Zhang, Kelly | Ethnically Biased? Experimental Evidence from Kenya | Journal of the European Economic Association Volume 18 (1); 2019 |
Berge, Lars Ivar Oppedal; Garcia Pires, Armando Jose | Gender, formality, and entrepreneurial success | Small Business Economics; page 1 - 20; 2019 |
New published paper by Lars Ivar Oppedal Berge and Armando José Garcia Pires in the Small Business Economics Journal, titled "Gender, formality, and entrepreneurial success"
A number of laboratory experiments have analysed the willingness of people to compete. However, to what extent is competitive behaviour in the lab linked to choices and results in real life?