State-business relations for entrepreneurial takeoff in Africa: institutional analysis
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African Journal of Economic and Management Studies
Abstract
Purpose – Reports and experiences suggest that several developing African economies are faced with
entrepreneurial-impeding forces such as lengthy bureaucratic processes and poor regulatory space. The study
examines a general trend in “doing business performance” among selected African countries and uses the case
of Ghana to explore how particular indicators or forces affect the development and deployment of small and
medium-sized enterprise (SME) policies.
Design/methodology/approach – Comparative analysis of six African economies on their ease of doing
business score. This is followed by a critical review of the literature to develop a six-point explanatory
framework to explore the relative position of the six countries on the ease of doing business scores. Using
Ghana as a critical case study, the authors deploy an in-depth case study analysis via in-depth interviews of
relevant stakeholders to validate the information from secondary sources.
Findings – The study observes that the nature of leadership, socio-cultural imperatives, economic structure and
policy and the role of domestic institutional players and international players have implications for the extent to
which the state creates an enabling environment for SMEs and entrepreneurial activities. The role of supportive
cultural software that will help drive SME and entrepreneurial growth has been established. The study contends
that different aspects of national culture do have implications for the tendency for people to be business-minded or
to have the ability to take risks. The demand and supply sides are crucial in promoting SME growth.
Originality/value – The study develops a framework that helps explore elements to help explain ease of
doing business scores and the viability of SMEs in Africa. These elements were validated through qualitative
interviews as well.
Description
Research Article