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Redefining women's entrepreneurial financing mechanism in Kenya and Nigeria: the emergence of Chama and Esusu

Redefining women's entrepreneurial financing mechanism in Kenya and Nigeria: the emergence of Chama and Esusu

Onoshakpor, Chioma, Sindani, Tabitha ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8638-3767 and Irene, Bridget (2024) Redefining women's entrepreneurial financing mechanism in Kenya and Nigeria: the emergence of Chama and Esusu. In: Babson College Diana International Research Conference 2024, 1st - 3rd June 2024, Stockholm, Sweden.

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Abstract

In many nations across the world there has been significant growth in the level of female entrepreneurs, this spans from developed economies (McAdam, 2013) such as the US, Australia, Canada, to the developing economies of Sub-saharan Africa (Aliyu, 2013). Also, as Sub-saharan African countries yearn for economic prosperity through growth and development of entrepreneurship, policymakers and governments are turning to female entrepreneurs as a way of achieving this (Adetiloye et al., 2020). However, female business owners face diverse challenges of which access to finance is most critical (Onoshakpor, Cunningham & Gammie, 2022). While research suggests that their inability to access finance comes from a lack of enough accumulated personal funds (Bastian, Sidani & El-Amine, 2018; Sindani, 2022), which results in lower levels of overall capitalisation, reduced ratios of debt finance and venture capital financing (Onoshakpor, Cunningham & Gammie, 2023). While these reasons convey much of the findings of western literature, there is still a dearth of knowledge from non-western contexts and sub-Saharan African contexts in particular. In addition to highlighting the challenges around access to finance for female entrepreneurs from mainstream finance institutions, the ways in which these disadvantaged groups finance their businesses are also a relevant contribution to the body of literature. This research, therefore, investigates women's financing mechanisms in the context of two sub-Saharan African countries with strong arguable patriarchal structures and offers solutions on how these financing mechanisms can be supported in order to support more female entrepreneurs.

Item Type: Conference or Conference Paper (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: women's entrepreneurship, access to finance, financial mechanism, Chama, Esusu, Kenya, Nigeria,
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
H Social Sciences > HC Economic History and Conditions
H Social Sciences > HG Finance
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: Greenwich Business School
Greenwich Business School > Executive Business Centre
Related URLs:
Last Modified: 27 Feb 2025 10:15
URI: http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/49889

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