Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa

Orientation: Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) owned by immigrants in developing economies, such as South Africa, tend to trust formal financial institutions (FFIs) for financial support. Research purpose: Even though immigrant SMEs create opportunities that have important implications for the So...

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Main Authors: Francis T. Asah, Lynette Louw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-08-01
Series:Acta Commercii
Subjects:
sme
Online Access:https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/953
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spelling doaj-1fe734d4870946e68bf03f4c4d55a7ab2021-09-03T08:54:25ZengAOSISActa Commercii2413-19031684-19992021-08-01211e1e1010.4102/ac.v21i1.953413Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South AfricaFrancis T. Asah0Lynette Louw1Department of Management, Faculty of Commerce, Rhodes University, GrahamstownDepartment of Management, Faculty of Commerce, Rhodes University, GrahamstownOrientation: Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) owned by immigrants in developing economies, such as South Africa, tend to trust formal financial institutions (FFIs) for financial support. Research purpose: Even though immigrant SMEs create opportunities that have important implications for the South African economy; less than 5% of them can access credit from FFIs. This study, therefore, explores the accessibility of credit from FFIs to immigrant SMEs from a supply-side perspective. Motivation for the study: Research studies on improving financing from FFIs to immigrant SMEs will help to boost the survival of immigrant SMEs and promote economic development in South Africa. Research design, approach and method: This qualitative research design used an interpretivistic research paradigm to achieve the research objectives. Data were collected from 16 purposively selected participants and analysed using the five-step process of content analysis outlined by Terre Blanche, Durrheim and Kelly. Main findings: The findings revealed that FFIs are uninterested and biased against considering financing immigrant SMEs and tend to charge them higher interest rates. Collateral, equity contribution and the possession of a South African permanent resident permit with a South African ID are the most important requirements that impact the willingness of FFIs to finance immigrant SMEs. Practical/managerial implications: Implications for the financial institutions in policy development were provided. Contribution/value-add: This research study highlights the requirements and the challenges faced by immigrant SMEs in accessing credit from FFIs. The use of qualitative research design further contributed to the literature on FFIs financing of immigrant SMEs.https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/953formal financial institutionssupply-sidecreditimmigrantsme
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francis T. Asah
Lynette Louw
spellingShingle Francis T. Asah
Lynette Louw
Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
Acta Commercii
formal financial institutions
supply-side
credit
immigrant
sme
author_facet Francis T. Asah
Lynette Louw
author_sort Francis T. Asah
title Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
title_short Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
title_full Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
title_fullStr Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in South Africa
title_sort formal financial institutions financing of immigrant small and medium enterprises in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series Acta Commercii
issn 2413-1903
1684-1999
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Orientation: Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) owned by immigrants in developing economies, such as South Africa, tend to trust formal financial institutions (FFIs) for financial support. Research purpose: Even though immigrant SMEs create opportunities that have important implications for the South African economy; less than 5% of them can access credit from FFIs. This study, therefore, explores the accessibility of credit from FFIs to immigrant SMEs from a supply-side perspective. Motivation for the study: Research studies on improving financing from FFIs to immigrant SMEs will help to boost the survival of immigrant SMEs and promote economic development in South Africa. Research design, approach and method: This qualitative research design used an interpretivistic research paradigm to achieve the research objectives. Data were collected from 16 purposively selected participants and analysed using the five-step process of content analysis outlined by Terre Blanche, Durrheim and Kelly. Main findings: The findings revealed that FFIs are uninterested and biased against considering financing immigrant SMEs and tend to charge them higher interest rates. Collateral, equity contribution and the possession of a South African permanent resident permit with a South African ID are the most important requirements that impact the willingness of FFIs to finance immigrant SMEs. Practical/managerial implications: Implications for the financial institutions in policy development were provided. Contribution/value-add: This research study highlights the requirements and the challenges faced by immigrant SMEs in accessing credit from FFIs. The use of qualitative research design further contributed to the literature on FFIs financing of immigrant SMEs.
topic formal financial institutions
supply-side
credit
immigrant
sme
url https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/953
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