Abstract

Being an entrepreneur in Latin America has been a complex problem, not because of the absence of people who develop new business, but because of a kind of generalized distrust that suggests that projects can be only materialized in their contexts of origin, that is, in the countries themselves. Thus, the absence of growth of entrepreneurship and innovation projects is not only due to external factors, such as the possibility of financing and expansion, but also to other factors that seem to be characteristics of Latin American people, such as the relationship with failure. To this extent, this article aims at presenting the public policy of Start-Up Chile that demonstrates that innovation and the global deployment of an idea developed in a specific context could be possible. In short, this text intend to arouse the entrepreneurs of the local stagnation in which they are immersed.

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