Publication | Closed Access
A Study of Small Neighborhood <i>Tienditas</i> in Central America
29
Citations
33
References
2012
Year
Latin American StudyEconomic DevelopmentTiendita Business SectorEducationEntrepreneurshipIndustrial OrganizationCompetitive AdvantageUrban SocietyManagementBenchmark TienditasInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyInformal EconomyInternational ManagementEconomicsStrategic ManagementBusiness EcosystemUrban GeographyEl SalvadorCentral AmericaBusinessBusiness StrategyAnthropologyInformal Institution
We describe and benchmark tienditas (in-home convenience-like retail stores) and the tiendita business sector using a large sample of 850 tienditas from Nicaragua and El Salvador. Three research questions concerning tiendita business dynamism, informality, and competitive scope shape our article. In general, we find that tienditas may range from subsistence operations to dynamic business enterprises primarily run by female microentrepreneurs; they typically skirt government oversight; and they compete fiercely in a monopolistically competitive business environment.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1