Author(s)
Sawada, NaotakaKeywords
BUSINESS OWNERSVALUABLE
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
ACCESS TO FINANCE
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
WORKING CAPITAL
ROAD NETWORK
LACK OF ACCESS
JOB TRAINING
INTERNATIONAL BANK
SAFETY
PRODUCTIVITY
INVENTORY CREDIT
ALTERNATIVE EMPLOYMENT
INFORMATION ON MARKETS
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS
EDUCATION LEVELS
INCOMES
LACK OF CAPITAL
TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
CALCULATION
MARKET INFORMATION
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
PROPERTY RIGHTS
COLLATERAL REQUIREMENT
TRANSPORT
TRAINING PROGRAMS
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
START-UP
BUSINESS SUPPORT
ROAD BUILDING
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
BUSINESS ENTRY
TAX
TRANSACTION
ENTREPRENEURS
RURAL BUSINESS
GUARANTEE SCHEME
SMALL BUSINESS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
FORMAL BANKING
PROFITABILITY
SMALL ENTERPRISE
CONSUMER
LAND MARKETS
TRUCKS
CAPACITY BUILDING
SAFETY NETS
COMMODITY
TRANSPORT IMPROVEMENT
WAGE
LOAN APPLICATIONS
INVESTMENT CLIMATE ASSESSMENT
OUTREACH
MODE OF TRANSPORT
QUESTIONNAIRES
TRANSPORT SERVICES
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
STAKEHOLDER
ROAD
DRIVERS
INDIVIDUAL ENTREPRENEURS
BOTTLENECKS
TRAVEL TIME
BANKS
SMALL BUSINESS AGENCIES
ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
BANKRUPTCY
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
LAND USE
TRANSPORTATION COST
DELIVERY MECHANISM
BORROWING
INTEREST RATES
COST OF TRANSPORTATION
CONTRIBUTION
ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT
QUERIES
RISK REDUCTION
ACCOUNTING
BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
ACCESS TO LOAN
HANDICRAFT
HUMAN CAPITAL
INSURANCE
BUREAUCRATIC RED TAPE
BANK ACCOUNT
LINE OF CREDIT
FORMAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
MICRO-ENTREPRENEURS
TECHNICAL SKILLS
PARTIAL CREDIT
INVESTMENT CAPITAL
ACCESS TO MARKET
MEANS OF TRANSPORT
FUTURE GROWTH
LIMITED ACCESS TO FINANCE
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE
PENETRATION RATE
TRANSPORT COSTS
SAVINGS
MICROFINANCE LOANS
WEALTH
FINANCIAL LITERACY
BENEFICIARIES
HIGH INTEREST RATE
MARKET DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
BUSINESS OPERATIONS
NEW BUSINESS
COLLATERAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
LOAN AMOUNT
LIMITED ACCESS
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE
URBAN AREAS
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
TELEPHONE
GENDER EQUALITY
OUTSTANDING LOANS
ASSISTANCE TO BUSINESS
RURAL TRANSPORT
TRANSPORTS
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
MONEY TRANSFER
RURAL FINANCE
KNOWLEDGE GAPS
MATERIAL
MICROFINANCE
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
BRIDGE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
INEQUALITY
INVESTING
WEALTH CREATION
FARM ENTERPRISES
LABOR MARKET
ACCESS TO FINANCING
GENDER
FINANCIAL PRODUCTS
COST OF TRANSPORT
EXCLUSION
TRANSACTION COSTS
WAGES
RURAL ROADS
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
LOCAL BUSINESSES
BUSINESS PLANNING
FORMAL FINANCIAL SERVICES
PUBLIC AWARENESS
EARNINGS
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT
FINANCE ACCESS
SUPPLY CHAIN
ENTERPRISE GROWTH
MARKET DEMAND
FINANCIAL MARKETS
START-UP CAPITAL
CREDIT GUARANTEE
EXTENSION SERVICES
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
HOUSEHOLD EXPENSES
CARS
MARKET SHARE
COMMERCIAL BANKS
BUS
FINANCIAL ILLITERACY
HIGH TRANSPORTATION
LOAN
PRIVATE ENTERPRISE
CORRUPTION
FARMERS
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
TRAFFIC
GENDER ISSUE
FISCAL POLICY
ACCESS ROADS
WORTH
TAX RATE
FIXED ASSET
AFFORDABLE TRANSPORTATION
MOBILITY
ROADS
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
DIVERSIFICATION
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
NEW MARKET
INVESTMENT STRATEGY
BUSINESS PLAN
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
HOUSEHOLDS
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
INCOME INCREASE
BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION
MARKETING
VEHICLES
SALES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26897Abstract
An appropriate rural investment climate
 (RIC) is essential for rural businesses to be successful and
 generate employment and income in their communities.
 Improving the investment climate could facilitate
 income-generation activities in both farm and nonfarm
 sectors, thus reducing rural poverty. Nonfarm sector focused
 growth, combined with agricultural growth, and has been
 shown by Delgado et al. (1998) to have a significant impact
 on the local economy through the generation of employment
 and income. This study is the first to focus on both farm
 and nonfarm enterprises in its 2010 surveys of RIC in Yemen,
 Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Mozambique unlike six previous
 RIC assessment (RICA) pilot projects that focused only on
 nonfarm enterprises. This report assesses the weaknesses and
 strengths of all RIC components in farm and nonfarm
 enterprises of the four countries surveyed, and recommends
 measures to address the weaknesses. The report identifies
 similar business obstacles for farm and nonfarm enterprises
 and four critical areas of the RIC to be improved. The
 results of the RICA are based on analyses of obstacles
 perceived by rural entrepreneurs and on assessments by RIC
 indicators, enterprise entry and exit, and enterprise
 performance. To have maximum synergy effects, farm and
 nonfarm enterprises should be promoted together.Date
2012-02Type
Working PaperIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/26897http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26897
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Promoting the Rural Farm and Nonfarm Businesses : Evidence from the Yemen Rural Investment ClimateSawada, Naotaka; Zhang, Jian (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012-12-07)This study examines the major constraints of rural business entry and performance in Yemen. The Yemen rural investment climate survey made it possible to analyze rural investment climate constraints for rural businesses. The survey was used to investigate both farm and nonfarm rural enterprises. The rural investment climate was assessed using a combination of subjective impressions related by rural entrepreneurs, and a more objective, empirical set of analyses that employed indicators to rank the constraints to "doing business" in the areas surveyed. These empirical analyses included application of the entry model, the performance model, the closure model, and the migration model. The migration model was introduced to identify how the rural investment climate variables at the community level increase migration and economic activities. Based on the assessment of the rural investment climate, this paper identifies and explains four critical areas in which the rural investment climate in Yemen can be improved: market demand, access to markets, access to finance, and the provision of business services. Because farm and nonfarm businesses often experience common or similar constraints, the climate in which they operate can often be improved with the same measures and policies. Addressing the constraints that affect rural women entrepreneurs in particular, who play a vital role in rural nonfarm enterprises, warrants clear priority as a means to generate income and employment. Security and labor issues are identified as the key such constraints that disproportionately affect women.
-
Small Enterprise Growth and the Rural Investment Climate : Evidence from TanzaniaLoening, Josef L.; Kinda, Tidiane (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2008-07)This paper analyzes characteristics of nonfarm enterprises, their employment growth patterns, and constraints in doing business in rural Tanzania. Using unique survey data, the authors describe a low-return sector struggling to compete in a difficult business environment. However, about one-third of rural enterprises are growing fast. Most enterprises engage in agricultural trade. Due to a rapidly growing agricultural sector in recent years, limiting demand-side constraints, rural enterprise constraints in Tanzania mainly operate from the supply side. This suggests that, in particular, access to finance, road infrastructure, and rural cell phone communication is correlated with employment growth. A major finding is that subjective and objective measurements of business constraints are broadly comparable. The authors discuss a number of factors that would help to unleash the full potential of private sector-led growth in rural areas. The findings show that marginal improvements in the rural investment climate matter for growth.
-
The Rural Investment Climate : Analysis and FindingsWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2013-03-11)Interest in investment climates has emerged relatively recently. In the 1960s and 1970s, governments in many countries believed they should play a direct role in rural credit, input supply, production, trade, transport, distribution, and even marketing. However, in the 1980s and 1990s, government-dominated systems fell into disgrace because of poor performance. For the rural sector, the primary focus had traditionally been on agriculture, particularly commercial agriculture and agribusiness, which were perceived to be the main drivers of rural growth. This study's essential findings and policy implications are organized into the following six chapters. Annexes provide supporting material. Chapter two presents an overview of related work and of the literature; it also describes the subsequent chapters' methodological framework, including new ways of addressing questions of endogeneity in these kinds of surveys while seeking to isolate cause and effect. Chapter three, by applying econometric analysis, measurably extends the examination of enterprise performance and investment climate constraints initiated in RIC1 (first rural investment climate). A rigorous examination of enterprise dynamics and entrepreneurial choice is developed in chapter four. Aiming to highlight the differing effects on Rural Nonfarm Enterprises (RNFEs), chapter five draws together the main implications RIC2 findings on the rural investment climate in the three country pilots. Community-level influences also matter, and chapter six examines how the local IC and other community characteristics shape the environment for economic activity. Conclusions and recommendations appear in chapter seven, including suggestions for using RIC results for policy reform and for targeting the rural public expenditures needed to foster improvements in the rural investment climate. The annexes describe the databases employed and the methodologies used in the study, as well providing detailed regression results.