Abstract

This paper takes a closer look at the problems of petty producers belonging to traditional artisan communities in Gujarat, India. Broadbasing of entrepreneur ship being one of the cardinal objectives of the entrepreneurship development movement in India, artisan communities, where production skills are transferred hereditarily, have borne the brunt of mechanisation and commercialisation that accompany economic development. In the absence of any meaningful measures to develop them into tiny entrepreneurs, many artisans have shifted to non-tradi tional vocations, mostly as casual wage workers. At the same time, lack of access to productive assets seems to have prevented the emergence of 'entrepreneurialism' within these communities.

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