The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries

Microfinance institutions render essential services to start-up small, micro, medium-sized enterprises (SMMEs) by way of extending loans to entrepreneurs. SMMEs operating in South Africa have relatively better access to microfinance loans in comparison with those operating in Nigeria, Kenya and Ethi...

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Main Authors: Yohannes Worku, Mammo Muchie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2019-03-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11758/PPM_2019_01_Worku.pdf
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spelling doaj-47ed9bc962c24bfcace89ce62e33d7942020-11-25T03:35:37ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672019-03-0117132633810.21511/ppm.17(1).2019.2811758The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countriesYohannes Worku0Mammo Muchie1Postdoctoral Fellow, Tshwane University of TechnologyPostdoctoral Fellow, Tshwane University of TechnologyMicrofinance institutions render essential services to start-up small, micro, medium-sized enterprises (SMMEs) by way of extending loans to entrepreneurs. SMMEs operating in South Africa have relatively better access to microfinance loans in comparison with those operating in Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia. A survey was conducted in order to compare the relative ease of access to microfinance loans in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia based on a survey conducted in the four Sub-Saharan African countries. The ease of access to microfinance loans was assessed based on criteria defined by Barry and Tacneng (2014). A total of 401 SMMEs participated in the study. Loan applicants were asked to provide answers to questions that indicated the ease of securing loans and meeting loan repayment conditions. Emphasis was placed on the demand for collateral as a requirement for extending loans to applicants, the assessment of entrepreneurial and auditing skills of loan applicants, the difficulty of meeting loan repayment conditions, and adherence to regulations and guidelines recommended by governments. Descriptive, bivariate and multivariate methods of data analyses were used for data analyses. The study found that about 21% of SMMEs were satisfied with the ease of securing loans, whereas the remaining 79% of SMMEs did not. The ease of access to microfinance loans varied by country in which South African loan applicants were the most satisfied in comparison with the remaining three countries. Securing microfinance loans, as well as fulfilling loan repayment conditions were easiest in South Africa, and most difficult in Ethiopia. In terms of ease of securing loans and meeting loan repayment conditions, the order of nations was ranked as South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia. In all four countries, the ease of access to microfinance loans was influenced by country of business operation, extent of benefits realized by SMMEs, and highest level of formal education.https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11758/PPM_2019_01_Worku.pdfaccess to financeordered probit regressionSMMEsurvival
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yohannes Worku
Mammo Muchie
spellingShingle Yohannes Worku
Mammo Muchie
The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
Problems and Perspectives in Management
access to finance
ordered probit regression
SMME
survival
author_facet Yohannes Worku
Mammo Muchie
author_sort Yohannes Worku
title The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
title_short The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
title_full The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
title_fullStr The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
title_full_unstemmed The survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 African countries
title_sort survival of business enterprises and access to finance: the case of 4 african countries
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Microfinance institutions render essential services to start-up small, micro, medium-sized enterprises (SMMEs) by way of extending loans to entrepreneurs. SMMEs operating in South Africa have relatively better access to microfinance loans in comparison with those operating in Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia. A survey was conducted in order to compare the relative ease of access to microfinance loans in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia based on a survey conducted in the four Sub-Saharan African countries. The ease of access to microfinance loans was assessed based on criteria defined by Barry and Tacneng (2014). A total of 401 SMMEs participated in the study. Loan applicants were asked to provide answers to questions that indicated the ease of securing loans and meeting loan repayment conditions. Emphasis was placed on the demand for collateral as a requirement for extending loans to applicants, the assessment of entrepreneurial and auditing skills of loan applicants, the difficulty of meeting loan repayment conditions, and adherence to regulations and guidelines recommended by governments. Descriptive, bivariate and multivariate methods of data analyses were used for data analyses. The study found that about 21% of SMMEs were satisfied with the ease of securing loans, whereas the remaining 79% of SMMEs did not. The ease of access to microfinance loans varied by country in which South African loan applicants were the most satisfied in comparison with the remaining three countries. Securing microfinance loans, as well as fulfilling loan repayment conditions were easiest in South Africa, and most difficult in Ethiopia. In terms of ease of securing loans and meeting loan repayment conditions, the order of nations was ranked as South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia. In all four countries, the ease of access to microfinance loans was influenced by country of business operation, extent of benefits realized by SMMEs, and highest level of formal education.
topic access to finance
ordered probit regression
SMME
survival
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/11758/PPM_2019_01_Worku.pdf
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