Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis

Running a social enterprise (SE) is more difficult than running a small or medium-sized enterprise because SEs have to achieve both economic sustainability as business enterprises and their social mission for the benefit of society. After a few years of operation, many SEs fail or struggle for survi...

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Main Authors: Sidney Leung, Phyllis Mo, Howard Ling, Yanto Chandra, So Sum Ho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:China Journal of Accounting Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309119300127
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spelling doaj-4720132a83cd40ddbc8cd0640b37b5c92020-11-24T22:00:37ZengElsevierChina Journal of Accounting Research1755-30912019-06-01122157176Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysisSidney Leung0Phyllis Mo1Howard Ling2Yanto Chandra3So Sum Ho4Department of Accountancy, College of Business, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China; Corresponding author.Department of Accountancy, College of Business, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaSocial Enterprise Business Centre, Hong Kong Council of Social Service, Hong Kong, ChinaDepartment of Applied Social Science, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, ChinaDepartment of Accountancy, College of Business, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaRunning a social enterprise (SE) is more difficult than running a small or medium-sized enterprise because SEs have to achieve both economic sustainability as business enterprises and their social mission for the benefit of society. After a few years of operation, many SEs fail or struggle for survival. In this study, we examine some of the factors that affect an SE’s profitability, financial management, and business planning and management. Based on in-depth interviews with 22 social enterprises in Hong Kong, we find that SEs with the dual investment objectives of social mission and financial return are more sustainable and competitive than SEs with social impact as their sole objective. Furthermore, SEs managed by non-owner managers have better financial planning and performance than those managed by owner managers. In addition, SEs with an oversight/advisory committee are more competitive and have better management practices than those without such a committee. Our findings have policy implications for government, SEs, funding bodies, and non-profit organizations to enhance and promote the development of the social enterprise sector. Keywords: Social enterprises, Corporate governance, Sustainability, Social mission, Advisory committee, Social enterprise performancehttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309119300127
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sidney Leung
Phyllis Mo
Howard Ling
Yanto Chandra
So Sum Ho
spellingShingle Sidney Leung
Phyllis Mo
Howard Ling
Yanto Chandra
So Sum Ho
Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
China Journal of Accounting Research
author_facet Sidney Leung
Phyllis Mo
Howard Ling
Yanto Chandra
So Sum Ho
author_sort Sidney Leung
title Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
title_short Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
title_full Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
title_fullStr Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in Hong Kong: A three-dimensional analysis
title_sort enhancing the competitiveness and sustainability of social enterprises in hong kong: a three-dimensional analysis
publisher Elsevier
series China Journal of Accounting Research
issn 1755-3091
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Running a social enterprise (SE) is more difficult than running a small or medium-sized enterprise because SEs have to achieve both economic sustainability as business enterprises and their social mission for the benefit of society. After a few years of operation, many SEs fail or struggle for survival. In this study, we examine some of the factors that affect an SE’s profitability, financial management, and business planning and management. Based on in-depth interviews with 22 social enterprises in Hong Kong, we find that SEs with the dual investment objectives of social mission and financial return are more sustainable and competitive than SEs with social impact as their sole objective. Furthermore, SEs managed by non-owner managers have better financial planning and performance than those managed by owner managers. In addition, SEs with an oversight/advisory committee are more competitive and have better management practices than those without such a committee. Our findings have policy implications for government, SEs, funding bodies, and non-profit organizations to enhance and promote the development of the social enterprise sector. Keywords: Social enterprises, Corporate governance, Sustainability, Social mission, Advisory committee, Social enterprise performance
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309119300127
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