Unpacking the drivers of university students’ entrepreneurial intentions: Individual mindset and contextual influences in EU and EU-candidate countries
This study explores the entrepreneurial intentions of university students from different educational, economic, and social backgrounds by comparing four European Union (EU) countries (Italy, Austria, Sweden, Greece) to an EU-candidate country (Bosnia and Herzegovina). Data were collected through surveys on a convenience sample of 301 students. The hierarchical regression and formal statistical hypothesis testing assess and compare the role of individual factors and contextual activating factors. In doing so, the paper adopts and adapts the EPIC tool, making it suitable for cross-country comparison. The results indicate a lack of significance of the risk-taking dimension, and a striking similarity in the influence of resources as a contextual activating factor, despite the differences of the investigated countries. In addition, the results indicate the individual mindset dimensions that significantly contribute to the entrepreneurial intentions of EU students (innovation-oriented, persistence, and peculiarity), and the different predictors for students from Bosnia and Herzegovina (innovation-oriented and action-oriented). The paper contributes to the stream of research on entrepreneurial intentions in higher education by assessing the individual and contextual factors within a fine-grained cross-cultural comparison. Insights for institutions and policymakers to enhance support and resources for aspiring entrepreneurs can ultimately be derived.