This article departs from the traditional analysis of the effects of risk aversion in
entrepreneurship to study the determinants of entrepreneurial risk aversion in
developing a new venture and becoming an entrepreneur.We took fear of failing
as a proxy for risk aversion and applied our analysis to the most important Latin
American economies.We observed that being male, having more years of formal
education and believing to have the necessary skills to develop a new venture
decreased the probability of feeling a fear of failing and, thus, eventually
increased the probability of developing a new venture. Age affects risk quadratically
(first positively, but after some point, negatively), and if there is a prior
experience of having shut down a business, risk aversion increases, that is, the
probability of feeling a fear of failing, which reduces the probability of becoming
an entrepreneur.