The growing academic interest in “cultural values, innovativeness, and
entrepreneurial competencies” among ethnic entrepreneurs raises an important
analytical question, are entrepreneurial competencies genuinely shaped by
ethnicity, or are they more accurately explained by historical conditions,
economic necessity, institutional access, and migration patterns?
The concept of entrepreneurial competencies itself is frequently treated too
broadly in both policy and academic discourse. Entrepreneurial competencies
generally refer to acquired capabilities such as opportunity recognition,
strategic decision making, risk management, innovation, resilience, negotiation
skills, networking capacity, and resource mobilisation. These are learned and
socially conditioned behaviours rather than biologically inherited or
ethnically fixed characteristics. Competencies develop through education,
market exposure, institutional incentives, family structures, social networks,
and responses to economic constraints.
This is where the discussion surrounding ethnicity becomes analytically
complex.
A significant portion of entrepreneurship literature risks essentialising
ethnic communities by implying that certain groups are inherently more
entrepreneurial than others. Such assumptions can unintentionally transform
historically contingent socioeconomic patterns into seemingly permanent
cultural attributes. Yet historical evidence suggests that entrepreneurial
behaviour often emerges from structural realities rather than ethnicity itself.
Sociologists and economic historians have long argued that minority
entrepreneurship frequently develops under conditions of exclusion or
restricted access to mainstream economic opportunities. Ivan Light’s
influential work on ethnic economies demonstrated that migrant and minority
communities often rely on self employment because of labour market
discrimination, barriers to professional mobility, or limited access to state
institutions. Similarly, Alejandro Portes’ theory of “ethnic enclaves” showed
how entrepreneurship can emerge through dense community networks that
compensate for institutional disadvantages. In many cases, entrepreneurial
activity is less a reflection of cultural preference than a rational adaptation
to structural marginalisation.
Historical examples support this interpretation. Jewish merchant networks in
Europe, Lebanese trading diasporas in West Africa, Chinese commercial
communities in Southeast Asia, and Indian merchant groups in East Africa all
developed strong entrepreneurial systems under conditions where minorities
occupied intermediary economic positions. These patterns were shaped not merely
by “culture” but by restrictions on land ownership, citizenship limitations,
exclusion from political power, or concentration within trade oriented
occupations.
The Malaysian case is especially distinctive and cannot simply be equated
with post World War II migrant entrepreneurship in countries such as the United
Kingdom, Canada, Australia, or the United States.
In many Western economies, post war migrants entered already industrialised
capitalist systems characterised by expanding labour markets and relatively
stable institutional structures. Migrant entrepreneurship often emerged as part
of broader upward mobility strategies within mature economies. In contrast,
Malaysia’s entrepreneurial history developed within a colonial political
economy that systematically organised labour and commerce along ethnic lines.
British colonial administration in Malaya institutionalised a segmented
economic structure that associated particular ethnic groups with different
economic functions. Malays were largely concentrated in subsistence agriculture
and rural administration, Chinese migrants were heavily involved in tin mining,
urban commerce, and small scale enterprise, Indians were predominantly employed
in plantation labour and clerical sectors. This division was not naturally
occurring but actively reinforced through colonial governance, residential
separation, education systems, and labour policies.
As historians such as Jomo Kwame Sundaram and Edmund Terence Gomez have
argued, the contemporary association between Chinese Malaysians and business
dominance cannot be understood outside this colonial framework. Chinese
commercial concentration was partly a consequence of British indirect economic
management, which relied heavily on migrant capital and intermediary trading
networks. Entrepreneurial competencies within these communities were therefore
historically cultivated through participation in commerce intensive sectors
over generations, not through ethnic predisposition.
Furthermore, post independence Malaysia introduced another major structural
factor, state-led affirmative economic restructuring through the New Economic
Policy (NEP) after 1971. The NEP aimed to reduce poverty and rebalance economic
participation following the racial tensions culminating in the May 13 incident
of 1969. Bumiputera participation in business, higher education, and corporate
ownership was actively expanded through quotas, state enterprises, preferential
financing, and educational access.
This period demonstrates how entrepreneurial competencies can be
institutionally cultivated rather than culturally inherited. Government
agencies such as MARA, Permodalan Nasional Berhad (PNB), and various state
linked development programs were designed specifically to create a Bumiputera
entrepreneurial and professional class. The emergence of large Malay corporate
figures in sectors such as construction, telecommunications, logistics, and
energy during the 1980s and 1990s reflected deliberate state capacity building
rather than sudden cultural transformation.
At the same time, indigenous entrepreneurship in the Malay Archipelago long
predated both British colonialism and modern migration flows. Historical
records from the Malacca Sultanate, Aceh, Johor-Riau, and Bugis trading
networks reveal extensive indigenous commercial systems operating across the
Indian Ocean and Southeast Asian maritime routes centuries before colonial
consolidation. Malay, Bugis, Acehnese, Minangkabau, and Arab-Muslim traders
were deeply embedded in regional commerce involving spices, textiles, shipping,
and finance.
Anthony Reid’s work on Southeast Asian trade economies demonstrates that pre
colonial port cities in the archipelago were highly commercialised environments
integrated into global trade systems linking China, India, the Middle East, and
Europe. The tendency to frame entrepreneurship primarily through later Chinese
migrant success stories therefore risks overlooking indigenous commercial
histories disrupted by colonial restructuring.
More recent migrant entrepreneurs in Malaysia further illustrate the
importance of structural positioning over ethnicity itself. Indonesian,
Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Rohingya, and Myanmarese migrant communities
increasingly participate in informal retail, food services, small scale
manufacturing, and labour subcontracting sectors. Their entrepreneurial
activities often arise from limited formal employment protections, immigration
restrictions, and reliance on transnational community networks.
For example, Pakistani and Bangladeshi migrants have become prominent in
Malaysia’s textile retail and convenience sectors not because of innate ethnic
entrepreneurialism, but because these sectors offer relatively accessible entry
points requiring lower institutional barriers. Similarly, refugee and
undocumented communities frequently turn to informal entrepreneurship due to
exclusion from regulated labour markets. Again, entrepreneurship emerges as an
adaptive response to economic positioning.
This broader perspective aligns with Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of capital
accumulation. Entrepreneurial success is strongly shaped by access to economic
capital, social capital, cultural capital, and institutional legitimacy.
Communities that develop dense kinship financing systems, business mentorship
traditions, or intergenerational commercial knowledge often gain cumulative
advantages over time. These advantages may later appear “cultural,” even though
they were historically produced through repeated adaptation to economic
conditions.
Global evidence also challenges simplistic ethnic explanations. Countries
such as South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and China experienced rapid
entrepreneurial and industrial expansion within only a few decades once state
policy, education, infrastructure, and industrial incentives aligned
effectively. Conversely, communities historically labelled “entrepreneurial”
may experience stagnation under political instability, weak institutions, or
exclusionary economic systems. This suggests that entrepreneurship is highly
responsive to structural environments rather than fixed cultural identity.
The real analytical challenge, therefore, is distinguishing between culture
as an explanatory variable and culture as a proxy for deeper historical and
institutional realities.
Culture undoubtedly matters. Values surrounding family obligation, savings
behaviour, trust networks, educational aspiration, and risk tolerance can
influence entrepreneurial activity. However, culture alone cannot adequately
explain why entrepreneurial competencies emerge strongly in some contexts and
weaken in others. Overemphasising ethnicity risks obscuring the decisive roles
of colonialism, migration systems, labour market segmentation, state policy,
education, legal institutions, and capital access.
Entrepreneurial competencies are real and measurable. Yet attributing them
primarily to ethnicity risks reproducing deterministic narratives that
oversimplify a far more complex interaction between history, political economy,
migration, and institutional development.
Perhaps the more productive question is not which ethnic group is “naturally
entrepreneurial,” but rather, under what historical, political, and economic
conditions do entrepreneurial competencies emerge, strengthen, and sustain
themselves across societies and communities?
Cheers.
ravivarmmankkanniappan@2123220520263° 3' 52" N, 101° 35' 37" E












