III.3 What Does Entrepreneurship Look Like in Developing Countries?
It is important to clarify what is meant by entrepreneurship in developing countries.
A number of terms are used interchangeably to describe entrepreneurial activities. For
example, entrepreneurship and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have been used
synonymously. Discussions of entrepreneurial activities in developing countries have also
included the informal sector and petty capitalism ([68],). Many African manufacturing
firms, for example, had fewer than 150 employees ([69], p.114) and therefore would fall
into the SME sector. Fafchamps writes that “market intermediation in Africa is
characterized by a plethora of small traders, seldom exceeding a handful of employees and
family helpers.” ([69]) The World Bank, in its efforts to target entrepreneurship, has
focused on both the small business and the informal sectors. In 2003, the World Bank
released a new database on the SME sector and the accompanying study found that when
both the SME and the informal sectors are considered, “the joint contribution…to GDP
remains approximately constant across income groups at around 65-70 percent. As income
increases however, there is a marked shift from the informal to the SME sector.” ([70],
p.11) This finding indicated that the informal sector in developing countries is an
important source of economic activity. Another concept is petty capitalists, or small
businesses which employ relatively few employees and rely heavily on their owner’s and
the owner’s family’s labor, include a wide spectrum of entrepreneurs – from the numerous
export enterprises of Hong Kong (See also [71]), the maquila workshops in Mexico which
produce garments for export, the furniture manufacturers in Italy, to Taiwan’s integrated
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circuit producers ([68]). In developed economies, however, scholars have argued for a
distinct concept of entrepreneurship. Carland et al, for example, writing on the American
economy, make a strong distinction between the SME sector and entrepreneurship ([72]).
They find that,
Although there is considerable overlap between small business and
entrepreneurship, the concepts are not the same. Entrepreneurial firms
may begin at any size level, but key on growth every time…..The
entrepreneur is characterized by preference for creating activity,
manifested by some innovative combinations of resources for profit. ([72],
p.357)
However, while SMEs and entrepreneurship have different meanings, both are important in
an economy ([73]). Indeed, the small business sector may serve as a “vehicle both for
Schumpetarian entrepreneurs introducing new products….and for people who simply run
and own a business for a living.” ([73], p.140) Similar distinctions have been made
between survival or necessity entrepreneurs and opportunity entrepreneurs.
Do these distinctions matter for developing countries? As the major share of firms
in developing countries are small, in terms of the number of employees and assets; and
many operating in the informal economy using family labor, this review’s distinction of
entrepreneurship cannot, therefore, be based on size. Any distinctions drawn in this review
between entrepreneurship, the small business sector, petty capitalism and the informal
sector will be based on the Schumpeterian concept of innovation– new products, new
markets and new processes. However, as Schumpeter pointed out, that “the “new thing”
need not be spectacular or of historical importance….To see the phenomenon even in the
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humblest levels of the business world is quite essential though it may be difficult to find
the humble entrepreneurs historically.” ([61], p.151) Therefore, this study adopts the
widest possible definition of entrepreneurship.
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