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Enhancing competitiveness and securing equitable development: Can small, micro, and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) do the trick?
61
Citations
7
References
2005
Year
Small BusinessesStartup EcosystemDevelopment EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentRegional DevelopmentEntrepreneurshipCompetitive AdvantageSocial SciencesSmall Business EconomicsSmall And Medium EnterprisesSouth AfricaManagementAfrican DevelopmentEconomicsMedium-sized EnterprisesStrategyStrategic ManagementBusiness EcosystemEquitable DevelopmentBusinessBusiness StrategyDevelopment PolicyGlobal Competitiveness
Many governments and aid agencies believe small businesses can promote equitable development and enhance local industry competitiveness, yet SMEs face numerous obstacles. The article aims to clarify how to prioritize policy goals and differentiate the real and potential roles of SMEs by sector, size, and location. By analyzing context, priorities, and enterprise characteristics, the authors identify resources and policies tailored to each goal and enterprise type, illustrated through South Africa’s simultaneous promotion of SME development, Black Economic Empowerment, and global competitiveness. The authors illustrate that South Africa’s policy mix simultaneously promotes SME development, Black Economic Empowerment, and global competitiveness.
Many governments and aid agencies believe that small businesses can contribute to promoting more equitable development, as well as enhancing the competitiveness of local industries within a global economy. While small, micro, and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) may have a role to play in creating jobs, and generating and redistributing wealth, they need to overcome many obstacles. This article stresses the importance of understanding the specific context, establishing priorities among competing policy goals, and distinguishing between the actual and potential roles of different kinds of enterprises (by sector, size, and geographical location). Only on such a basis is it possible to identify the resources and policies most appropriate for each goal and each type of enterprise. These arguments are illustrated with reference to South Africa, whose government has sought simultaneously to promote SME development, Black Economic Empowerment, and global competitiveness.
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