Source of finance and small enterprise’s productivity growth in Ghana
Date
2013
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Economic and Management Studies
Abstract
Purpose
– The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of nature and a range of
institutional sources of start-up finance on micro and small enterprises’ (MSEs) productivity growth
in Ghana.
Design/methodology/approach
– Using a unique non-farm household enterprise survey data from
Ghana, this paper estimated TFP or Solow residual as a proxy for MSEs’ productivity growth as well
as other for robustness checks.
Findings
– After controlling for firm-level characteristics such as size, age, ownership type, etc. the
study finds that debt finance was positively associated with productivity growth, while financing from
donation or charity did not. Second, this paper found significant positive associations between a more
formal financing source such as formal and semi-formal financing sources and MSE’s productivity
growth. This finding was robustly confirmed by manager’s growth perception. Further, compared to
internal finance, external financing sources were found to be positively associated with productivity
growth – indicating complementarities among all external financing sources.
Research limitations/implications
– Further research will be needed to validate these results,
particularly using enterprise ongoing finance or working capital rather than start-up capital.
Originality/value
– The study contributes to the finance literature by studying the impact of nature
and institutional financing sources on MSEs’ productivity growth in the African context.
Description
Keywords
Small enterprises, Source of finance, Productivity growth, Ghana