Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Chepurenko A., Galitsky E., Oslon A. Adaptation of Russian Small Business to the COVID-19 Pandemic Shocks: The First Evidence of a Longitude. Social Sciences and Contemporary World. 2023. No. 2. P. 90–110.



Chepurenko A., Galitsky E., Oslon A. Adaptation of Russian Small Business to the COVID-19 Pandemic Shocks: The First Evidence of a Longitude. Social Sciences and Contemporary World. 2023. No. 2. P. 90–110.
ISSN 0869-0499
DOI 10.31857/S0869049923020065
РИНЦ: https://elibrary.ru/contents.asp?id=53805523

Posted on site: 29.11.23

Текст статьи на сайте журнала URL: https://publications.hse.ru/pubs/share/direct/836516266.pdf (дата обращения 29.11.2023)


Abstract

Using the data of two waves of the longitudinal project started by the ‘Public opinion’ Foundation (July – November 2021, initial N = 750 people), the dynamics of strategies and factors of Russian small business’ adaptation to the shocks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic are examined. It is shown that: (1) assessment of the situation in the economy and in their own business correlates with the respondents’ business strategy – entrepreneurs with the growth strategy are more often positive about the general economic situation than those who are focused on stability or surviving. (2) The motivation to do business aff ects the assessment of the situation and the response to it. Those who conduct business for the purpose of self-fulfi llment more often than others assess the state of their business aff airs positively, while those who conduct business out of necessity more often evaluate it negatively. (3) Depending on the change of the current income, small entrepreneurs can quickly change the strategy, whereas the reduction in current income aff ects the change in strategy more strongly than their increase: entrepreneurs with decreasing business income are more likely to change the strategy to a more conservative one (“stability” or “survival”), while income growth to a lesser extent leads to a change in strategy to a more active one (“development”).