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SMALL ENTREPRENEURS IN PAKISTAN:National Approaches

<< THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIPS IN SMEs:Kinds of Entrepreneurs
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SME Management (MGT-601)
VU
Lesson 5
This lecture will introduce the small entrepreneur in Pakistan the activities of SMEs in global and
regional level. It will also reveal the role of SMEs in a developing economy.
SMALL ENTREPRENEURS IN PAKISTAN
Salient Features:
1.Single Owner Entrepreneur
" He works with his own hands, combines the entrepreneur function of initiating the business making
investments, taking decisions and performing managerial functions".
2: Age Pattern
"The mean age of entrepreneur was found to be 42 years and of their enterprises 12 years. It is
comparable to the Korean age pattern (46)".
3. Educational Level
" Differing from industry to industry 60% have school education and 30% have college or better
education only 10% have professional or graduation level".
4. Social Background
" Caste played an important role in certain industries and on the other hand heritage is dominant. But
overall it is very diversified."
5. Sizes and Investment
" Majority started in a small way with less than 10 workers and 1/2 to 2/3 of the firms started with less
than 50,000 investment"
6. Growth
" The growth was fast in case of small firms than in large firms".
7. Profitability
" Rate of profit is
higher in case of small industries in comparison with the large
industries."
Role of SMEs in a Developing Economy
Unemployment and under employment are the prevailing economic diseases in most of the Asian countries
and they are result of a fundamentally disproportionate relationship between population and the use of
available land resources. Rapid and continuing increase of population, in the last half century have led to a
situation in which there are far too many people engaged in agriculture this situation is further aggravated by
an antiquated system of land tenures, by poor standards of health and malnutrition by the use of primitive
and inefficient techniques on small un-Economical holdings and by an uncertain climate for rains, weather
changes etc. among the classical remedies suggested for tackling the problem of poverty and
underemployment, large scale industrialization is perhaps the most important. This has no doubt, resulted in
a phenomenal increase in the production of useful goods and have brought movement in living standards as
well as in lowering the rate of population growth. But in many Asian countries large-scale industrialization
has been slow particularly for the shortage of supply of capital.
Under the circumstances, the problem of unemployment and underemployment can be tackled by the
expansion and modernization of the existing small-scale cottage industry and the introduction of new
industries capable of raising the level of production and improving the present depressed standard of living.
The large-scale industry has been slow to develop and has succeeded to a very limited extent in absorbing
the surplus population of the countryside. SMEs are still the most extensive tools for controlling
unemployment.
In Ceylon (Sri Lanka) as early as in 1949 nearly 286,000 persons were engaged in small industries, in
China in 1933 approximately 10 million workers were responsible for 80% of the total industrial output by
working in SMEs. In India more than twenty five million people are engaged in cottage and small industry.
In countries like Germany, Switzerland and France there exists today a large group of industrial workshops
and units side by side with the large factories. Japan furnishes the most striking example of the survival and
growth of small-scale industries. This phenomenal development is due to careful planning, the integration
of industries with agriculture and not the least important.
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SME Management (MGT-601)
VU
Cottage and small industries have a very important role in the national economy, offering as they do, scope
for individual, village or cooperative enterprises and means for the rehabilitation of the displaced persons.
National Approaches
South Africa
In South Africa there are about 800,00 small medium sized and micro enterprises in addition to the
two to three million persons carrying different self-employment activities.
Country
Index
Share
Less than 100 employees
34% employment and 32%
United States
sales
Japan
Less than 300
99%
of
all
employees'
establishments.
71.9% of all employees. 55% of
all value added. 51.8% of all
shipments.
Federal
Republic
of Less than 10 employees
85%% of all companies.
Germany
France
Less than 9 employees
99.9% of all firms.
Chile
Less than 9 employees
99% of all firms.
39% value addition.
Republic of Korea
Small industry
38.4% value addition.
Brazil
Small- scale sector
43.6% employment.
29.6% production share.
Philippines
Small scale manufacturing
90% of all establishments.
50% of employment.
About 33% value addition.
Pakistan
SMEs are considered as engines of economic growth in both developed and developing countries. They
provide low cost employment since the unit cost of persons employed is lower for smes than for large-size
units.
·
Assist in regional and local development since SMEs accelerate rural industrialization by linking
it with some organized urban sector.
·
Help achieve fair and equitable distribution of wealth by regional dispersion of economic
activities.
·
Contribute significantly to export revenues because of the low cost labor-intensive nature of its
products.
·
Have a positive effect on trade balance since SMEs generally use indigenous raw materials.
·
Assist in fostering a self-help and entrepreneurial culture by bringing together skills and capital
through various lending and skill enhancements schemes.
·
Impart the resilience to withstand economic upheavals and maintain a reasonable growth rate
since being indigenous is the key to sustainability and self-sufficiency.
·
Although no accurate data is yet available, it is estimated that there are approximately 220,000
SMEs in Pakistan, which:
·
Provide employment to over 80% of the labor force since artisans, workshops, household
units, craft industries, vendors and agro based businesses that cluster around the townships
and population centers have a tremendous capacity to provide employment.
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SME Management (MGT-601)
VU
·
Contribute more than 50% to GDP by manufacturing products to meet the demands of
local and regional markets.
·
Contribute more than 50% towards export earnings through both, direct and indirect
exports. Have a default rate that is far less than that of large-scale enterprises.
·
15% for SMEs, as against 65% for LSEs. Avail credit to the tune of only 12% from the
formal financial sector, which indicates the wide gap between the lenders and SMEs.
·
The SME sector also provides both rural and urban women to utilize their vocational skills
while staying within residential premises. In urban areas, many female entrepreneurs have
introduced product lines uniqueness has created a strong demand in the market.
·
Today, the SME sector is the lifeline of the big industrial establishments due to its direct
contribution and support towards value addition and exports. For the past three decades,
the fastest growing export industries have been dominated by SMEs. Of all, cotton weaving
and textile rank between the top two exporting sectors. Others include sports goods,
surgical instruments, carpets and footwear etc. SME exports dominate low value added
sectors and rely on traditional technologies.
SAUDI ARABIA
LARGE FIRMS
SMALL FIRMS
Sales per employee
SAR 486,000
SAR 158,000
Gross Margin to Sales %
14.2
4.4
Return on Assets %
18.7
5.4
Saudization*
14.3
8.5
Jobs created per million SAR 1.0
28.3
invested
* Saudis as a share of total employees.
The erroneous view of SMEs all-scale industry, which is persisting in many developing countries, is that
they constitute only a transitional phase in development and that small industry development is a temporary
expedient or a "second best" alternative. This seems to base on the assumption that as a country moves
from a traditional to a modern economy, it will have no more need or place for small-scale industries. But
experience of some of the most industrially advanced countries clearly shows that while some industries
start as small and grow into large establishment in terms of capital, output and employment, small scale
industries as such continue to constitute a fairly large and important sector of their industrial structure. In
the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Japan industrial enterprises
employing less than 100 persons account for the overwhelming majority of small- scale industrial
enterprises. Employing less than 100 persons need not necessarily be small. Because in capital-intensive
industries in advanced countries generally small number of workers may be evidence of automation rather
than smallness in size. However, in a majority of cases, enterprises employing less than 100 persons may be
taken as relatively small in the scale of operation as well. The contribution to total output in manufacturing
ranges from about one quarter to one third, and to total employment in manufacturing from about one
quarter to one half in some industries. Small establishments have a predominant position, in the United
States for example, they contribute more than 75% of total value added in certain branches of foodstuffs
and clothing industries. Small industries can coexist successfully with large industries because of certain
inherent advantage of small-scale production or of small industries which functions complementarily with
large industries as producers of components and supplies for them. Experience in advanced countries has
established the fact that in certain circumstances, in manufacturing certain products by small industries
cannot only coexist with large industries, but also even out compete them. Similarly, experience in
developed countries has proved that the subcontracting system by which a large numbers of small firms
supply components and parts of large industries have not only stabilized and strengthened the small firms,
but also contributed substantially to the efficiency and economies of the big industries. One of the major
tasks of the small industries promotion should be to identify the industries where production on small-scale
basis offers the maximum advantages and give direction and lead to potential entrepreneurs into such fields.
In fact, we would consider this as the first and most important step in small industry promotion. It is true
that some small industries require some more measures of protection. This incidentally is true also of many
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SME Management (MGT-601)
VU
large-scale industries as well. If care is taken to promote sustained capacity, it will be possible to build up a
truly balanced industry structure where small and large industries will coexist to their mutual advantage.
Given adequate encouragement, this sector has greater potential of growth with spin of benefits. An investment in small
enterprises is alone synonymous with investment in human resource.
References
1-Small and medium enterprise development( A visionary action in Saudi Arabia) by Ismail
Radwan & Jamal al-Kibbi( World Bank Institute)
2-Small Entrepreneurs in Developing Countries by Dr Asghar Nasir
3-Unit 2 -What is an SME (A UNIDO Publication)
Book recommended -Small Entrepreneurs in Developing Countries by Dr Asghar Nasir
Key terms
1-Antiquate
2-GDP (gross domestic product) the annual total value of the goods produced and services
provided by a country)
3-Default rate (The rate of failure to pay back the loans/credits)
4-Value added (The worth placed on a product by a particular stage in the production process)
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Table of Contents:
  1. THE HISTORY:Cottage Industry, CONCEPT OF SMALL BUSINESS
  2. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SMALL AND BIG BUSINESS:The SME’S in Pakistan
  3. THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIPS IN SMEs:Focus and Perseverance Guide the Entrepreneur
  4. THE ROLE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIPS IN SMEs:Kinds of Entrepreneurs
  5. SMALL ENTREPRENEURS IN PAKISTAN:National Approaches
  6. THE DEVELOPMENT OF SMES IN PAKISTAN:The Industrial History of Pakistan
  7. GOVERNMENT’S EFFORT TOWARDS SME DEVELOPMENT:Financing Programs
  8. THIS LECTURE DEFINES THE ROLE OF NGOS AND SMEDA:Mission Statement
  9. ISSUES AND POLICY DEVELOPMENT FOR SME:Monitoring Developments
  10. ISSUES IN SME DEVELOPMENT:Business Environment, Taxation Issues
  11. LABOR ISSUES:Delivery of Assistance and Access to Resources, Finance
  12. HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT:Market and Industry Information, Monitoring Developments
  13. MARKET AND INDUSTRY INFORMATION:Measuring Our Success, Gender Development
  14. LONG TERM ISSUES:Law and Order, Intellectual Property Rights, Infrastructure
  15. THE START UP PROCESS OF A SMALL ENTERPRISE:Steps in Innovative Process
  16. TECHNICAL FEASIBILITY:Market Feasibility, Market Testing
  17. FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY:Financial resources and other costs, Cash Flow Analysis
  18. ASSESSMENT OF PERSONAL REQUIREMENTS AND ORGANIZATIONAL CAPABILITIES:Analysis of Competition
  19. Post Operative Problems of a New Enterprise:Environmental Causes
  20. HOW TO APPROACH LENDERS:Bank’s Lending Criteria, Specific Purpose, Be Well Prepared
  21. WHAT A BANK NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT YOU:General Credentials, Financial Situation
  22. COMMERCIAL INFORMATION:Checklist for Feasibility Study, The Market
  23. GUARANTEES OR COLLATERAL YOU CAN OFFER:Typical Collateral
  24. Aspects of Financial Management:WINNING THE CASH FLOW WAR, The Realization Concept
  25. MEANING OF WORKING CAPITAL:Gross Working Capital, Net Working Capital
  26. RECRUITMENT, SELECTION AND TRAINING:Job Description, Job Specification
  27. SELECTION AND HIRING THE RIGHT CANDIDATE:Application Blank, Orientation
  28. TRAINGING AND DEVELOPMENT:Knowledge, Methods of Training
  29. CONDITIONS THAT STIMULATE LEARNING:Limitations of Performance Appraisal, Discipline
  30. QUALITY CONTROL:Two Aspects of Quality, Manufactured Quality
  31. QUALITY CONTROL:International Quality Standards, MARKETING
  32. MARKETING:Marketing Function, MARKETING PROCESS - STEPS
  33. MARKETING:Controllable Variable, Marketing Uncontrollable, Marketing Mix
  34. MARKETING:Demerits of Product Mix, Development of new product, SMEDA
  35. ROLE OF TECHNOLOGY:Training programmes, Publications
  36. ROLE OF TECHNOLOGY:Measure to Undertake for Promoting Framework.
  37. EXPORT POTENTIAL OF SME IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES I:Commonly Seen Assistance Programme
  38. EXPORT POTENTIAL OF SME IN DEVELOPING Countries. II:At the national level
  39. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO):WTO Agreements: Salient Features
  40. WTO MINISTERIAL CONFERENCES:PAKISTAN AND WTO
  41. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) PAKISTAN & WTO. II:International Treaties
  42. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) PAKISTAN & WTO. III:Agriculture
  43. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO):PAKISTAN & WTO. III
  44. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO):CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
  45. SUMMARY & CONCLUSIONS:Financing Tool, Financing Tool