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Determinants of Informal Entrepreneurship in Africa

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-04-29, 10:14 authored by A Ejiogu, O Okechukwu, C Ejiogu, A Owusu, O Adeola
This study investigates the determinants of informal entrepreneurship in Africa. Using a crosssection of 21,954 firms from 47 African countries, the study estimates several multivariate models to examine the factors that are associated with the decision of firms to register at the start of their operation and the length of time to remain unregistered. The findings show that entrepreneurship in the informal sector is complex and context-bound as contextual factors unique to Africa, such as, corruption, political instability, crime rate, infrastructure (electricity and transportation), access to land and finance, influence the entrepreneur’s decision to register their firm at the start of its operation. The length of time firms remain unregistered is shown to be positively correlated to access to finance and infrastructural availability and negatively related to crime and political instability. These results vary based on the size of the business with larger businesses being impacted less by these variables.

History

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Business

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business

Volume

45

Issue

1

Pagination

35-61

Publisher

Inderscience

issn

1476-1297

Acceptance date

2019-03-30

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2023-11-15

Language

en

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