The role of formal and informal finance in the informal sector in Ghana
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Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Abstract
Within the developing world, especially Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA),
informal (small and medium) enterprises’ (SMEs) access to financing
has been extremely limited mainly because of the reluctance
of banks and other formal financial institutions to lend to such
firms. The impact of this challenge on their growth trajectory has
remained relatively indeterminate. This study examines the differential
impact of sources of finance on the growth of informal
firms in Ghana. We employ the Heckman Selection Technique
(HST) to model the selection process of firm financing choices
and reverse causality problem. By making use of the World Bank’s
enterprise survey data on 720 informal firms in Ghana from
2007 – 2010, we find that formal sources of finance, compared to
informal sources, are superior in their impact on firms in Ghana.
Formal finance institutions, with their ability to provide more than
just finance, positively affect firm growth. This result has an
important policy implication for the current focus of Government
of Ghana in promoting indigenous entrepreneurship through initiatives
that will enhance access to financial support of local
enterprises in Ghana. In view of this, this study proposes that
Government policy towards formal financing institutions and their
lending to informal sector need adjustments to provide incentives
that will encourage increased lending to informal firms
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Festus Ebo Turkson, Emmanuel Amissah & Agyapomaa Gyeke-Dako (2020): The role of formal and informal finance in the informal sector in Ghana, Journal of Small Business & Entrepreneurship, DOI: 10.1080/08276331.2020.1724002