International Journal of

Business & Management Studies

ISSN 2694-1430 (Print), ISSN 2694-1449 (Online)
DOI: 10.56734/ijbms
Family Size, Impulsivity, And Unintended Entrepreneurial Action: A Study Based On Fuzzy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis

Abstract


This study uncovers the multiple pathways and complex influence mechanisms that drive unintended entrepreneurial action by examining the interplay between family size and impulsivity traits. Unlike entrepreneurship driven by conscious rational judgment, unintended entrepreneurship occurs without prior intention or systematic reasoning analysis. Using fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA), we tracked 500 respondents over time and analyzed 49 valid samples of individuals who engaged in unintended entrepreneurial action. Drawing on trait activation theory, our findings reveal that two high-order configurations exert equivalent effects on unintended entrepreneurial action. The first configuration is characterized by planned or default actions in low-stimulus environments, where individuals with low deliberation and high sensation seeking pursue opportunities with less conscious analysis. The second configuration is driven by impulsive actions in high-stimulus environments, where high perseverance and low urgency enable individuals to persist despite uncertainty. By integrating family size and impulsivity dimensions (deliberation, urgency, sensation seeking, and perseverance), this study contributes to the literature on entrepreneurial action and personal traits through a configuration perspective, revealing the multi-path mechanisms through which impulsivity traits interact with different family contexts to trigger unintended entrepreneurship and expanding the boundary conditions of trait activation theory.