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Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County

The main objective of this research was to determine which factors constrain the growth and survival of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Nairobi County, Kenya. It is reasonable to expect that SMEs would be keenly supported financially and otherwise, given the worldwide consensus that suc...

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Main Author: Muzenda, Tigere
Other Authors: Biekpe, Nicholas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Muzenda, Tigere
author2 Biekpe, Nicholas
author_browse Biekpe, Nicholas
Muzenda, Tigere
author_facet Biekpe, Nicholas
Muzenda, Tigere
author_sort Muzenda, Tigere
collection Thesis
description The main objective of this research was to determine which factors constrain the growth and survival of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Nairobi County, Kenya. It is reasonable to expect that SMEs would be keenly supported financially and otherwise, given the worldwide consensus that such businesses are engines of economic growth. In studies around the world by Beck (2007) and Ayyagari, Demirguc-Kunt and Maksimovic (2011) report that SMEs constitute about 95% of all businesses in an economy, create over 60% of all jobs, contribute between 60% and 70% to a country’s gross domestic product (GDP), foster industrial innovation and growth, and help to increase provision of services that meet local demand. However, statistics produced by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) indicate that 71% of registered small businesses collapse within three years after starting operations; 72% of the owners use their own or family savings as sources of capital for starting their business while only 5.6% have access to formal bank finance. Given the apparent lack of support for SMEs and their reported rate of failure, this study used stratified random sampling to survey a multi-sector representative sample of 179 SMEs in Nairobi County to determine the exact causes of their demise. More specifically, this project sought to establish if poor infrastructure, failure to access formal finance, weak or absence of collateral, equity injection, poor provision of electricity, limited managerial skills, prevalence of crime or political instability could be the factors constraining growth and survival of SMEs. Data collected were mostly qualitative but converted to quantitative by use of dummy variables. Equity injection was quantitative, measured by the growth of equity from that at inception to the third year of operation. Employing multiple regression, the study established that lack of access to finance, level of equity injection/equity growth and crime were statistically significant explanatory variables. The study recommends that the government should strengthen its fight against crime and corruption, and work closely with development partners to facilitate the training and education of SME owners to embrace modern corporate governance practices. There is need for financial sector players to devise more innovative, risk-mitigating but business-friendly financial products that are accessible to SMEs. In addition, the government is advised to set up a specialist financial institution whose mandate is to provide financial and non-financial support to SMEs.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30483 Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County Muzenda, Tigere Biekpe, Nicholas Motelle, Sephooko I The main objective of this research was to determine which factors constrain the growth and survival of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Nairobi County, Kenya. It is reasonable to expect that SMEs would be keenly supported financially and otherwise, given the worldwide consensus that such businesses are engines of economic growth. In studies around the world by Beck (2007) and Ayyagari, Demirguc-Kunt and Maksimovic (2011) report that SMEs constitute about 95% of all businesses in an economy, create over 60% of all jobs, contribute between 60% and 70% to a country’s gross domestic product (GDP), foster industrial innovation and growth, and help to increase provision of services that meet local demand. However, statistics produced by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) indicate that 71% of registered small businesses collapse within three years after starting operations; 72% of the owners use their own or family savings as sources of capital for starting their business while only 5.6% have access to formal bank finance. Given the apparent lack of support for SMEs and their reported rate of failure, this study used stratified random sampling to survey a multi-sector representative sample of 179 SMEs in Nairobi County to determine the exact causes of their demise. More specifically, this project sought to establish if poor infrastructure, failure to access formal finance, weak or absence of collateral, equity injection, poor provision of electricity, limited managerial skills, prevalence of crime or political instability could be the factors constraining growth and survival of SMEs. Data collected were mostly qualitative but converted to quantitative by use of dummy variables. Equity injection was quantitative, measured by the growth of equity from that at inception to the third year of operation. Employing multiple regression, the study established that lack of access to finance, level of equity injection/equity growth and crime were statistically significant explanatory variables. The study recommends that the government should strengthen its fight against crime and corruption, and work closely with development partners to facilitate the training and education of SME owners to embrace modern corporate governance practices. There is need for financial sector players to devise more innovative, risk-mitigating but business-friendly financial products that are accessible to SMEs. In addition, the government is advised to set up a specialist financial institution whose mandate is to provide financial and non-financial support to SMEs. 2019-08-16T09:53:52Z 2019-08-16T09:53:52Z 2019 2019-08-16T08:53:58Z Master Thesis Masters MCom (Development Finance) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30483 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Muzenda, Tigere
Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
title_full Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
title_fullStr Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
title_full_unstemmed Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
title_short Growth and survival of small and medium-scale enterprises in Kenya – an empirical case study of Nairobi County
title_sort growth and survival of small and medium scale enterprises in kenya an empirical case study of nairobi county
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30483
work_keys_str_mv AT muzendatigere growthandsurvivalofsmallandmediumscaleenterprisesinkenyaanempiricalcasestudyofnairobicounty