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FEMALE INFORMAL ENTREPRENEURS: CONSTRAINTS AND OPPORTUNITIES. Marty Chen WIEGO Network Harvard Kennedy School World Bank and University of Michigan Conference Female Entrepreneurship: Constraints and Opportunities June 2-3, 2009. REMARKS. Female Informal Entrepreneurs
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FEMALE INFORMAL ENTREPRENEURS:CONSTRAINTS AND OPPORTUNITIES Marty Chen WIEGO Network Harvard Kennedy School World Bank and University of Michigan Conference Female Entrepreneurship: Constraints and Opportunities June 2-3, 2009
REMARKS Female Informal Entrepreneurs • Who are they, what do they do? • Why are we concerned? • What constraints and risks do they face? • What can be done to address these constraints and risks? But first a few global facts…
GLOBAL FACTS • self-employment represents a far higher share of total employment in developing countries (33-50%) than in developed countries (around 12%) • self-employment is growing in all regions • a larger share of female workers, than male workers, is self-employed • self-employment is heterogeneous, including: • by employment status: employers + own account operators + unpaid contributing family workers • by class: entrepreneurial non-poor (mainly employers) + working poor (most own account operators and unpaid family workers) • women are over-represented among own account operators and unpaid family workers (the working class) and under-represented among employers (the entrepreneurial class)
FEMALE INFORMAL ENTREPRENEURS:WHO ARE THEY? WHAT DO THEY DO? • Occupation or Sector: • petty trade and commerce: especially sale of fresh and cooked food • light manufacturing: notably textiles, garments, and craft manufacturing • food and beverage processing: including liquor brewing in some societies • personal services: e.g. beauticians • Employment Status: • relatively few owner-managers who hire others • many own-account operators in single-person or family enterprise • many industrial outworkers producing under sub-contracts for supply chains • many unpaid contributing workers in family businesses Note: in many societies, women are seen or treated as unpaid contributing family workers even when they are the de jure or de facto head of the family businesses • Size: concentrated in smallest enterprises without hired workers • Place of Work: often the home
FEMALE INFORMAL ENTREPRENEURS:WHY ARE WE CONCERNED? # 1 Women less likely than men to be in wage employment # 2 Female-run enterprises and women’s earnings contribute to… • Household Welfare: to family income and welfare • daily cash flow of households • female-headed households • Gender Equity and Women’s Empowerment: women’s status and ability to control their own well-being • Economic Growth: although small in size, women’s informal enterprises are numerous, represent large share of all enterprises in many countries, and contribute to growth
INFORMAL ENTERPRISES:COMMON AND FEMALE CONSTRAINTS • Constraints common to all informal enterprises: these tend to be particularly severe for female informal enterprises • limited access to resources: productive assets + financial services + skills/education • limited access to business development services: especially innovation and competitiveness enhancing services + clusters + networking and inter-firm linkages • limited access to infrastructure: basic infrastructure (water, electricity, sanitation) + public infrastructure (roads, communication) + business infrastructure (backward and forward linkages) • unfair or hostile wider environment: macro-economic conditions, sector policies, procurement bids, laws, and regulations • Additional constraints specific to female entrepreneurs: these constraints are often more severe for female informal entrepreneurs than for female formal entrepreneurs • limited property rights: due to which women have fewer productive assets + less collateral to leverage capital • gender division of labor: by which women are seen to be the primary care givers + responsible for child rearing and domestic chores + responsible for daily cash flow of the household (which subsidizes the search for higher-return activities by men) • norms of female modesty: which restrict women’s physical mobility and interactions with strangers
INFORMAL ENTERPRISES:COMMON AND FEMALE RISKS • Risks common to all enterprises: exposure to these risks tends to be higher for informal enterprises than for formal enterprises + female entrepreneurs often have a harder time, than male entrepreneurs, coping with common risks • seasonality and natural disasters: associated with the weather • volatility in the market and economy: demand, competition, prices, exchange rates, depreciation • business risks: lack of contract enforcement + bankruptcy protection + negative return on investment • uncertain or unpredictable environment: policy, law, and regulation enforcement + general “law and order” situation • uncertain or unpredictable basic infrastructure: water, electricity supply • idiosyncratic crises and emergencies: illness andaccidents + fires and robberies + costly life-cycle events (marriages and deaths) • Additional risks specific to female entrepreneurs: exposure to these risks is often higher and the ability to cope is often lower for female informal entrepreneurs than for female formal entrepreneurs • care responsibilities: when other members of the family fall sick or become disabled • verbal harassment: by family, kin, or neighbors for working outside the home • sexual harassment: in the marketplace orby business partners
ADDRESSING CONSTRAINTS AND RISKSOF FEMALE INFORMAL ENTERPRISES:A THREE-PART POLICY FRAMEWORK Part I:Systemic Challenges • Micro-Enterprise “Half-Revolution”: need to do for non-financial services what the “micro-finance revolution” has done for financial services – including the focus on female informal entrepreneurs and “smart subsidies” for R & D • Economic Policy Dualism: need to reduce the biases and barriers inherent in many economic policies against informal enterprises in general and female informal enterprises in particular • Gender Norms: need to empower female entrepreneurs to be able to negotiate the gender norms that constrain their time, physical mobility, and/or interactions in the marketplace
ADDRESSING CONSTRAINTS AND RISKSOF FEMALE INFORMAL ENTERPRISES:A THREE-PART POLICY FRAMEWORK Part II:Sub-Sector Development • Premise: financial + non-financial services to individual entrepreneurs are often not sufficient to address systemic constraints and risks • Sub-Sector Development: has significant potential for developing whole sectors of under-served informal enterprises of women and/or men – promising examples involving sub-sector infrastructure and linkages + service delivery + policy advocacy include: • craft and textiles in Bangladesh (BRAC) • poultry in Bangladesh (BRAC) • alpaca in Bolivia (Enterprise Works Worldwide) • embroidery in India (Self-Employed Women’s Association) • milk in India (Amul Dairy) • honey in Kenya (Honey Care Africa) • textile waste in Philippines (Partners for Subsector Development) • silk in Thailand (Jim Thompson)
ADDRESSING CONSTRAINTS AND RISKSOF FEMALE INFORMAL ENTERPRISES:A THREE-PART POLICY FRAMEWORK Part III:Enabling Conditions To inform economic policy-makers and negotiate appropriate policies and interventions, female informal entrepreneurs need: • Visibility: through improved labor force and other economic statistics • Voice: organization into member-based associationsand representation in economic policy-making and rule-setting institutions • Validity: legal identity and official recognition as economic agents who contribute to the economy