While the barriers in Germany to such independent enterprising are increasingly being diminished in the face of opening global trade routes, it is still the case that Germany's public and private means to stimulating independent enterprising are less accessible and less plentiful than those found in the United States. Though in many ways, this is something which is subject to change based on such fluctuations in the economy as the pressures on the value of the American dollar today as compared to the relative success of the Euro which underscores the unionized German economy, the research and findings produced by the survey questionnaire considered here indicate a culture which is more predominant in the United States. The concern of this culture is with the variation of the marketplace through the entrance of a multi-stratified class of contenders.
An important finding which does not refute our study's primary resolutions but which does both suggest a coming change in current entrepreneurial imbalances and a subject for further study, is that respondents seem to be reflexive in some manner of the globalizing forces at play in the market. Especially for Germans, questions such as intended plans for the future and immediate growth targets would be met with frequent references either to ultimately competing on a global level or filling gaps left in the local market with acknowledgment of the impact levied on the landscape by globalization. Particularly, when speaking of future strategies, 22 out of 50 German respondents would mention either 'free trade,' 'globalization' or the "EU." This compares with balance to the 24 American respondents of 54 study participants who would mention either 'free trade,' 'globalization,' or 'international growth.' These can be considered relatively equivalent degrees of understanding as to the relationship between SME development and globalization in either context. This is an outcome which suggests that patterns in Germany may well be subject to change in the future, despite the resolutions yielded here.
Conclusion:
Ultimately, the findings which have been produced by the survey here conducted would endorse the overall argument that cultural factors have long promoted a distinction in entrepreneurial tendencies between the United States and Germany where the former places a greater deal more emphasis on independent business enterprising than does the latter. Indeed, the survey respondents would produce the qualitatively observed finding that in terms of both motive and means, American entrepreneurs would be illustrative of a culture where small and medium enterprise orientation is encouraged and supported through various sociologically induced avenues. By comparison, it was found that the German entrepreneurs who responded to the survey were less likely than their American counterparts to be either motivated or funded by avenues caused to existence by cultural or sociological factors. Instead, there appears a greater likelihood amongst German entrepreneurs...
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