|
|
Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! |
|
National Informal Sector Survey NISS Tagged Articles
|
3.1-3.2 The SME sector in Tanzania: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
| |
| The Tanzanian government defines SMEs according to sector, employment size,
and capital investment in machinery. Accordingly, SMEs are defined as micro, small,
and medium-size enterprises in non-farm activities, including manufacturing, mining,
commerce and services. A |
|
Other National Informal Sector Survey NISS Related Articles
|
Ending poverty means abandoning charity and accepting reality
| |
| Benin Mwangi, who blogs about doing business in Africa, asked me recently: "should the discussion be about how to get the informal sector to become part of the formal sector or should it be how to cater to the informal sector?" This in an excursion into the morass of African poverty and development.
The short answer is: neither; ending poverty has nothing to do with the informal sector.
|
|
|
12.0 The Entrepreneurial Firm Corporate Governance: Entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship in Africa
| |
| Very few studies of entrepreneurship concern themselves with corporate governance. This is particularly true in Africa where by far the majority of entrepreneurial firms are very small and operate in the informal sector. |
|
|
4.0 The state of women’s enterprises in Tanzania: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
| |
| Currently, there is no comprehensive data on the number of women in the MSME
sector, the size of their enterprises, or their distribution by sector. Only proxies are
available. In NISS (1991) women accounted for about 35 per cent of informal
enterprises. By 1995, it was estimated that the proportion of women in the sector could
have risen to 70 per cent of the informal sector labour force. In a 2000 Economic and
Social Research Foundation (ESRF) study, 55 per cent of the enterprises in the sample
were owned by women (as reported in Mlingi, 2000, p. 89). Swisscontact (2003)
estimated that women owned 43 per cent of MSEs. |
|
|
5.0 Support for SME development in Tanzania: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
| |
| The Government of the United Republic of Tanzania began its first major attempt to
promote the small industries sector as far back as 1966 with the formation of the National
Small Industries Corporation (NSIC) under the National Development Corporation
(NDC). |
|
|
10.2 Pre-start-up training: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
| |
| Data from a 1997-98 training needs assessment of informal sector operators found
that over 75 per cent of informal sector operators had primary education, while only
seven per cent had attended vocational training courses. Most had acquired their skills in
a variety of trades through apprenticeships or directly from their peers, but were unaware
of the theoretical aspects (reported in Mlingi, 2000, p. 81). Only 5.3 per cent of the MSEs
in the Swisscontact (2003) study had received any entrepreneurship training, and even
fewer in new product technologies or costing and pricing. This suggests that most MSEs
are “learning through trial and error” or from the practical know-how of other operators. |
|
|
2.3 Looking for Financial Sustainability: Microfinance in Africa - Experience and Lessons from Selected African Countries
| |
| The technologies described above, based on the formalization of informal techniques and on
group-based instruments, have been used to promote financial sustainability of MFIs. They
have the advantage of addressing a number of problems faced by financial institutions when
operating with the poor or with the informal sector, for example, asymmetry of information,
lack of collateral, and difficult enforcement of legal rights. |
|
|
Micro-enterprise and the 'mobile divide'
| |
| New benefits and old inequalities in Nigeria's informal sector |
|
|
4.1 The potential for training interventions: The demand for training
| |
| As is well known, the supply of training does not usually create its own demand. Clearly, therefore, training provision for the poor has been powerfully shaped by the nature of the demand for training among targeted groups, in particular in the informal sector. Lack of effective demand is a key reason for both the limited training provision for the poor (and hence outputs and impacts) in most countries as well as the overall failure of national training systems to reorient their activities in support of the poor.
|
|
|
4.1.2 Enterprises with growth potential: The demand for training
| |
| Most training strategies in the informal sector have targeted manufacturing microenterprises that are considered to have some growth potential. However, even within this relatively better-off segment of the informal sector, the effective demand for training has frequently been found to be quite limited. |
|
|
SME's - The need for more thought by African governments on the informal sector
| |
| The importance of a proper informal sector policy. |
|
Featured Article
Newsletter
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Suggestions
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.