Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?

The popular mindset and widespread narrative, at least until not so long ago, was that in outer space affairs the fiefdom belongs, politically and economically, to governments and big businesses. An array of alliances between few states and their privileged partners from the corporate world constitu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jora Octavian-Dragomir, Roşca Vlad I., Iacob Mihaela, Murea Maria-Mirona, Nedef Matei-Ștefan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2023-03-01
Series:Management şi Marketing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2023-0002
_version_ 1797817266228690944
author Jora Octavian-Dragomir
Roşca Vlad I.
Iacob Mihaela
Murea Maria-Mirona
Nedef Matei-Ștefan
author_facet Jora Octavian-Dragomir
Roşca Vlad I.
Iacob Mihaela
Murea Maria-Mirona
Nedef Matei-Ștefan
author_sort Jora Octavian-Dragomir
collection DOAJ
description The popular mindset and widespread narrative, at least until not so long ago, was that in outer space affairs the fiefdom belongs, politically and economically, to governments and big businesses. An array of alliances between few states and their privileged partners from the corporate world constituted the highly exclusivist space ecosystem. Little room was supposed to be available to non-full-fledged spacefaring nations and enterprises originated from them, a configuration furthermore jammed by the fact that international agreements – i.e., the “Outer Space Treaty” (1967) an the “Moon Treaty” (1979) – seem to be rather dismissive of extensive exploitation of celestial bodies, adding to the already prohibitive costs of such endeavours if legitimized. Devoted mainly to scientific exploration paired with exploitation only of planetary proximities – viz., the large satellite population orbiting the Earth, with their support and serviced industries, all estimated at half a trillion dollars –, the space economy, in its high-tech dimension, steadily democratized itself, becoming more competitive, and collaborative too, opening up to small and medium enterprises (SMEs), many coming from emerging spacefaring nations. The literature covering SMEs contribution to the development of the space economy is on track of consolidation, as the process itself is unfolding, with data covering only the most powerful space players (e.g., US, EU). Valuable insights are added starting from the common wisdom that institutions (channelling economic information and incentives) are the main drivers in space development, rather than business size, even more in a competitive- collaborative global economy. A case study is dedicated to the Romanian experience (that of a relatively new and little player in European/global space affairs). A conclusion is that in an economy of unbounded creativity and borderless capital, visionary enterprises, big or small, fit even into the space industry value chains, if a pro-market, pro-business climate is secured.
first_indexed 2024-03-13T08:51:06Z
format Article
id doaj.art-157f566099ce4fc38d77f1952a3a3330
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2069-8887
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T08:51:06Z
publishDate 2023-03-01
publisher Sciendo
record_format Article
series Management şi Marketing
spelling doaj.art-157f566099ce4fc38d77f1952a3a33302023-05-29T11:05:28ZengSciendoManagement şi Marketing2069-88872023-03-01181203510.2478/mmcks-2023-0002Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?Jora Octavian-Dragomir0Roşca Vlad I.1Iacob Mihaela2Murea Maria-Mirona3Nedef Matei-Ștefan41Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, Romania2Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, Romania3Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, Romania4Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, Romania5Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, RomaniaThe popular mindset and widespread narrative, at least until not so long ago, was that in outer space affairs the fiefdom belongs, politically and economically, to governments and big businesses. An array of alliances between few states and their privileged partners from the corporate world constituted the highly exclusivist space ecosystem. Little room was supposed to be available to non-full-fledged spacefaring nations and enterprises originated from them, a configuration furthermore jammed by the fact that international agreements – i.e., the “Outer Space Treaty” (1967) an the “Moon Treaty” (1979) – seem to be rather dismissive of extensive exploitation of celestial bodies, adding to the already prohibitive costs of such endeavours if legitimized. Devoted mainly to scientific exploration paired with exploitation only of planetary proximities – viz., the large satellite population orbiting the Earth, with their support and serviced industries, all estimated at half a trillion dollars –, the space economy, in its high-tech dimension, steadily democratized itself, becoming more competitive, and collaborative too, opening up to small and medium enterprises (SMEs), many coming from emerging spacefaring nations. The literature covering SMEs contribution to the development of the space economy is on track of consolidation, as the process itself is unfolding, with data covering only the most powerful space players (e.g., US, EU). Valuable insights are added starting from the common wisdom that institutions (channelling economic information and incentives) are the main drivers in space development, rather than business size, even more in a competitive- collaborative global economy. A case study is dedicated to the Romanian experience (that of a relatively new and little player in European/global space affairs). A conclusion is that in an economy of unbounded creativity and borderless capital, visionary enterprises, big or small, fit even into the space industry value chains, if a pro-market, pro-business climate is secured.https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2023-0002small and medium enterprisesspace economyspacefaring nationstechnologyvalue chains
spellingShingle Jora Octavian-Dragomir
Roşca Vlad I.
Iacob Mihaela
Murea Maria-Mirona
Nedef Matei-Ștefan
Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
Management şi Marketing
small and medium enterprises
space economy
spacefaring nations
technology
value chains
title Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
title_full Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
title_fullStr Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
title_full_unstemmed Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
title_short Small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars: what matters, besides size, in outer space economy?
title_sort small and medium enterprises shooting for the stars what matters besides size in outer space economy
topic small and medium enterprises
space economy
spacefaring nations
technology
value chains
url https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2023-0002
work_keys_str_mv AT joraoctaviandragomir smallandmediumenterprisesshootingforthestarswhatmattersbesidessizeinouterspaceeconomy
AT roscavladi smallandmediumenterprisesshootingforthestarswhatmattersbesidessizeinouterspaceeconomy
AT iacobmihaela smallandmediumenterprisesshootingforthestarswhatmattersbesidessizeinouterspaceeconomy
AT mureamariamirona smallandmediumenterprisesshootingforthestarswhatmattersbesidessizeinouterspaceeconomy
AT nedefmateistefan smallandmediumenterprisesshootingforthestarswhatmattersbesidessizeinouterspaceeconomy