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Title
An investigation into the impact of institutional support on the economic effectiveness of women-owned SMES in Harare |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10646/3702 |
Date
2016 |
Author(s)
Chiwutsi, Jeniffer |
Abstract
Entrepreneurship has emerged as a strong economic growth model and it is important
for government and other institutions to support it. SMEs are renowned engines for
growth of economies and women entrepreneurship, has steadily gained the attention
of researchers and institutions. This study sought to investigate the impact of
institutional support on the economic effectiveness of women-owned SMEs. The first
intention was to establish whether there is a causal relationship between various
elements of institutional support and the effectiveness of women's entrepreneurial
ventures. These elements were Institutional Financial Support, Institutional Services
awareness, Policy Support and Representational Organisations Support and their
impact on Enterprise Effectiveness. Secondly, it sought to establish whether current
institutional support is adequate from the perspective of women entrepreneurs in
Harare, Zimbabwe and institutions as well.
A review of literature has shown that there is great benefit in economically
empowering and supporting women entrepreneurs, in terms of GDP growth and value
chain development. Doing so, creates a potential of boosting per capita growth rates,
across the developing world of over 1.1% on average. Various elements were
reviewed, and it was found that most information on the topic focuses on SMEs
without particular reference to women-owned SMEs.
Despite limited statistics on the exact population of women-owned SMEs in Harare
due to lack of substantial databases in relevant government departments, a womenowned
SME sample was extrapolated based on number of SMEs obtained from
SMEAZ. Judgemental sampling for women entrepreneurs and stratified random
sampling for institutions were used to come up with survey respondents. Research
objectives, questions and hypotheses were answered after analysing responses to a
structured questionnaire using SPSS. The study concluded that there is a strong
positive relationship between financial support, services awareness, policy support
and representation organisation support and effectiveness of women's entrepreneurial
ventures. However, currently in Harare, Zimbabwe, there is inadequate institutional
support. Recommendations were made on follow up action and areas for further
research were identified. |
Subject(s)
Entrepreneurship; Economic growth; Enterprise effectiveness; Women-owned SMEs |
Language
en_ZW |
Format
application/pdf |
Identifier
Chiwutsi, J. (2016). An investigation into the impact of institutional support on the economic effectiveness of women-owned SMES in Harare (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Zimbabwe. |
Repository
Harare - University of Zimbabwe
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Added to C-A: 2021-03-01;09:52:56 |
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