Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018

Abstract This article examines the challenges and obstacles faced by female entrepreneurs in the cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprise (CMSME) sector in Bangladesh and shows that a combination of legislatory and regulatory reform can mitigate many of the issues that prevent women gaining from...

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Main Author: Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-09-01
Series:Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.286
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spelling doaj-06d6c2bbdfd347e28a7034a631e85e902020-11-25T01:59:34ZengWileyAsia & the Pacific Policy Studies2050-26802019-09-016339741610.1002/app5.286Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma0Financial Stability Department Bangladesh Bank Dhaka BangladeshAbstract This article examines the challenges and obstacles faced by female entrepreneurs in the cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprise (CMSME) sector in Bangladesh and shows that a combination of legislatory and regulatory reform can mitigate many of the issues that prevent women gaining from, and contributing to, this vital economic sector. Access to finance is found to be the greatest challenge faced by women in starting and operating CMSMEs in Bangladesh. This article explores the significant gender gap in access to formal credit, a gap that impacts negatively on the sector's growth and development. The article uses liberal feminist theory as a framework for analysis of the reforms. Analysis of data collected from banks and financial institutions on CMSME loans (2010–2018) shows that female entrepreneurs are treated significantly differently from men by financial institutions in Bangladesh.https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.286bank and financial institutionscottage, micro, small, and medium enterprisefemale entrepreneursgender gapliberal feminism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma
spellingShingle Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma
Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies
bank and financial institutions
cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprise
female entrepreneurs
gender gap
liberal feminism
author_facet Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma
author_sort Chowdhury Dilruba Shoma
title Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
title_short Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
title_full Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
title_fullStr Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
title_full_unstemmed Financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: Evidence from the financial sector in Bangladesh 2010–2018
title_sort financing female entrepreneurs in cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprises: evidence from the financial sector in bangladesh 2010–2018
publisher Wiley
series Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies
issn 2050-2680
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract This article examines the challenges and obstacles faced by female entrepreneurs in the cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprise (CMSME) sector in Bangladesh and shows that a combination of legislatory and regulatory reform can mitigate many of the issues that prevent women gaining from, and contributing to, this vital economic sector. Access to finance is found to be the greatest challenge faced by women in starting and operating CMSMEs in Bangladesh. This article explores the significant gender gap in access to formal credit, a gap that impacts negatively on the sector's growth and development. The article uses liberal feminist theory as a framework for analysis of the reforms. Analysis of data collected from banks and financial institutions on CMSME loans (2010–2018) shows that female entrepreneurs are treated significantly differently from men by financial institutions in Bangladesh.
topic bank and financial institutions
cottage, micro, small, and medium enterprise
female entrepreneurs
gender gap
liberal feminism
url https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.286
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