With the credit crunch hitting every business sector, little attention has been paid by politicians and policymakers to entrepreneurship and the role it can play in revitalising economies. That is why the results from this year’s Global Entrepreneurship Monitor study are important in examining how the wealth creators are performing around the world. The GEM programme is an annual assessment of the national level of entrepreneurial activity. Started in 1999 with 10 countries, the GEM 2008 study conducted research in 43 countries. Released last week, the 2008 report – which surveyed 150,000 adults just before the economic slowdown last summer – shows that, even then, there were reduced opportunities to start a business among non-entrepreneurs and, more critically, more were afraid of starting a business in case it might fail. At that stage, this fear of failure had yet to affect the rate of new start-ups globally, which had stayed at approximately the same level as last year. Of course,