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SAFIC (Successful African Firms and Institutional Change). CAE Workshop 7 th Dec 2017, RUC Søren Jeppesen, Assoc. Prof. & Project Coordinator, Centre for Business & Development Studies (CBDS), Department of Management, Society and Communication (MSC), CBS Welcome. SAFIC Team.
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SAFIC (Successful African Firms and Institutional Change) CAE Workshop 7th Dec 2017, RUC Søren Jeppesen, Assoc. Prof. & Project Coordinator, Centre for Business & Development Studies (CBDS), Department of Management, Society and Communication (MSC), CBS Welcome
SAFIC Team CBDS/CBS; DSSB/RUC; IDS/UoN, Kenya; UDSM-BS, Tanzania & Geography+Development Studies, UNZA, Zambia
SAFIC – Presentation – CAE 7th Dec 2017 • Introduction • Aims, Objectives & Research questions • Outputs • Theoretical framework • Methodological set-up • Learnings & Challenges
Introduction • Grant: FFU, 9 mill. DKK • Members: 13-15 senior, 5 PhDs • Time frame: 2012-2017 • Key sectors: • Food processing – Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia • Key individual sectors: • Tourism – Tanzania • Machinery producers – Kenya • Suppliers to the Mines - Zambia
Aims: • To investigate how and why African firms are able to be successful in changing business and institutional environments • To contribute to enhanced understanding of economic growth and employment through new knowledge on firm development in the African private sector
Objectives: Overall: * To identify strategies that lead to sustained firm performance, and * To seek to explain the firm’s success by looking at the interface between firm internal factors (resources and capabilities) and firms external factors (market structures and institutions – formal and informal) Specific: * To understand the origins of local firms’ success in Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia * as a means to inform firm strategies and economic development policy in these countries
Key research question: * How and why certain local firms in the three countries manage to grow with different degrees of success under changing conditions and often volatile market and institutional conditions?
Outputs (projected & realised): Academic: * 20 working & conf. papers - +30 * 20 journal articles - 11 published/ 4 in review/10-15 pipeline * 3 country background reports - 3 * 1 book/ A selection of case studies - 8 * 1 post-doc; 5 PhD theses - 1; 0 * 21 Master theses - 13 (4) * Joint + Individual country workshops (13) and Conferences (2) - 6 Joint /+20 individual/2
Outputs (projected & realised): Policy: * Press releases - 4+ * Policy briefs (at least 5) - 6+ * 4 Policy/stakeholder workshops – 4 (final one 14th Dec in Dar) * Interaction with stakeholders – A variety of forms
Theoretical framework: Eclectic Main theories and concepts: Firm Market Institutions
Theoretical framework Firm level: Resource based & Dynamic capabilities theories (Teece, Penrose, Grant and more) Concepts: Resources Capabilities (static, dynamic) Success (performance) Strategies
SAFIC Joint Workshop no 2 – Theoretical considerations (9) ‘Success’ (performance) - Which indicators? Financial and non-financial: 1) Financial 2) Market 3) Managerial 4) Human Resources 5) Technological/innovation 6) No. of & level of contacts to government 7) Involvement in business associations 8) Knowledge on regulations (local and global)?
SAFIC Joint Workshop no 2 – Theoretical considerations (9) ‘Success’ (performance) Selected indicators: Financial: 1) Change (Increase) in turnover (2007-2012) 2) Change in number of employees 3) Change in EBIT (2007-2012) 4) Self-assessment of performance vs. ‘industry average’ Rated & Ranked
KEY DEFINITIONS: • (Local) Ownership : ‘Majority owned by Citizen(s) of the country’ • Age of establishment: Min. 5 years • Number of permanent employees: 10 - Full time (permanent and casual)
SAFIC Joint Workshop no 2 – Theoretical considerations (11) ‘Strategies’ • Identification of strategies • Which strategies seem to be more or less successful? * Over time * In certain sectors, and/or * Under certain conditions
Theoretical framework Markets (market institutions): * Macro economic conditions * Trade * Industry (global, regional, local) * Competitors
SAFIC Joint Workshop no 2 – Theoretical considerations (12) Institutional theory: • Influence of formal and informal institutions on firm strategies (Peng, Hoskinsson, Meyer and more) • State-Business-relations (Formal: and Informal – Scott Taylor)
Development path and history (Successful) performance FIRM Resources and Capabilities Strategy Market structures and economic institutions Political and Social institutions Figure 1: Conceptualisation of the Firm and its Key Relationships Analytical framework:
Methodological set-up: Different analytical steps: • Explorative • Extensive • Intensive, and • Comparative and Retroductive
Methodological set-up Phases – data collection: 1. Mapping + Literature reviews 2. Surveys 3. Case studies (qualitative firm interviews) Key informants interviews
Methodological set-up Data collected: 1. Mapping: + 500 firms 2. Surveys: 210 FP firms/150 other 3. Case studies (2014-2016): FP (Z: 12, K: 12, T: 8) Other (Z: 12 (-2015), K: 8, T: ?) 4. Key informants interviews: +60
Learnings & Challenges Complex project management (5 institutions, 4 countries) Incentive structures (ensuring realisation of outputs) Data quality and access Progress of PhDs (sharing of responsibilities among DK and Southern seniors)
SAFIC Publications – 2 streams 11. Panum, K. and Hansen, M.W. (2017), ‘Social Enterprises …..’ Forthcoming in: International Journal of Development Studies? 10. Hansen, M. W., T. Langevang, L. Rutashobya & Urassa, G. (2017), Coping with the African Business Environment: Enterprise Strategy in Response to Institutional Uncertainty in Tanzania, Journal of African Business, 1-26. 9. Kragelund, P. (2017), The making of local content policies in Zambia's copper sector: International impediments to resource-led development. Resources Policy, Vol. 51, p. 57-668. Hansen, M. W., Buur, L., Kjær, A.-M. and Therkildsen, O. (2016), The Economics and Politics of Local Content in African Extractives : Lessons from Tanzania, Uganda and Mozambique. Forum for Development Studies. Vol. 43, No. 2, p. 201-2287. Charles, G., Jeppesen, S. Kamau, P. and Kragelund, P. (2016), Firm-level Perspectives on State-Business Relations in Africa: The Food-processing Sector in Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia. Forum for Development Studies, Vol 44, No. 1, p. 109-1316. Kragelund, P. and Carmody, P. (2016), The BRICS’ impact on local economic development in the Global South: the cases of a tourism town and two mining provinces in Zambia. Area Development and Policy, Vol 1(2): 218-237.5. Tvedten, K., Wendelboe Hansen, M. and Jeppesen, S. (2014), Understanding the Rise of African Business: In search of business perspectives on African enterprise development.African Journal of Economic and Management Studies, Vol. 5, No. 3, p. 249-2684. Urassa, G.C. (2014), The effect if the regulatory framework on the competitiveness of the dairy sector in Tanzania. International Journal of Public Sector Management, Vol. 27. No. 4, p. 296-3053. Charles, G., (2014), Role of Family Resources in Firm Performance: Evidence from Tanzania. Journal of African Business, Vol. 15, No. 2, p. 122-1352. Hampwaye, G. and Jeppesen, S. (2014), The role of state-business relations in the performance of Zambia's food processing sub-sector. Bulletin of Geography: Socio-economic series, Vol 26: 82-92. 1. Charles, G. and Rwehikiza, D. (2012), Owner Managers' Perception of the Impact of Regulations on the Competitiveness of Food Processors in Tanzania. Business Management Review, Vol 16: 71-101.
SAFIC PRESENTATION - CAE THANKS Info: https://www.cbs.dk/en/research/cbs-research-projects/major-research-projects/successful-african-firms-and-institutional-change-safic Email: sj.msc@cbs.dk