Title: On Determinants of SMEs in Ethiopia: Which Incentives Matter
1On Determinants of SMEs in Ethiopia Which
Incentives Matter?
- By Zuzana Brixiova
- Development Research Department,
- African Development Bank
African Economic Conference Addis Ababa, November
11 13, 2009
2Motivation for this topic
- Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the
world high and sustainable growth is key
challenge - Ethiopia presents a unique mixture of
characteristics - 1. Ethiopia as a Transition Economy
- Slowly declining share of state sector in the
economy - Limited share of the private sector
- 2. Ethiopia as a Low-Income Country
- Large informal sector (low productivity,
salaries) - Large and constant share of agriculture in output
- Slow adoption of new technologies and limited
infrastructure - High urban unemployment
3Motivation (cont.)
- The importance of SME start-ups and
entrepreneurship for growth and job creation in
transition economies is well documented - An extensive survey and empirical literature has
examined characteristics of SMEs in Ethiopia,
their constraints, and the urban labor market - This paper develops a theoretical framework for
these processes, then applies to comparing policy
options - It presents a simple model that illustrates
- how improved business environment and labor
market encourage entrepreneurship and employment - the role that government policies, including
subsidies, can play
4Motivation (cont.)
- In the past, somewhat extreme approaches to
development were adopted (Market failure vs.
Government failure) - Currently (SOEs), countries are rethinking their
growth strategies from relying on FDI and exports
as main drivers of growth to shifting some of
their resources to domestically-oriented
enterprises and demand - Current approach
- Private entrepreneurship is key driver of growth
and employment - Government plays coordinating/complementary role
to market forces, beyond the basic functions - Facilitating business-friendly climate (standard
function) - Adequate supply of human capital
- Active interventions in factors of production
in the labor market, gov. supports training and
reduces transaction costs through employment
exchange offices
5Some facts
- Limited role of the formal private sector
- Derg regime (1974 1991) Central planning
- II. The current government (1991 - now)
- Striving to support private sector development,
especially SMEs - Slow progress with privatization of large
enterprises - Currently, the private sector accounts for
- less than 50 percent of formal urban employment
- less than 50 percent industrial output
6Ethiopia Distribution of employed population in
urban areas, 2005 ( of total)
7High unemployment, insufficient private job
creation
- Supply factors urban population more than
doubled during 1990 - 2007, from 6 mln. in 1990
to 13 mln. in 2007 - Skills provided by educational system do not
match requirements of the private sector
(mismatch) - Demand side factors slow job creation in the
formal private sector - 30 percent of those who were unemployed in 1994
were still unemployed in 2004 - 22 percent left the labor force
- Of those who found jobs, only 17 percent went to
the formal private sector
8Employment and youth unemployment rates in urban
centers, 2005
9Unemployment and youth unemployment rates in
urban centers, 2005
10Obstacles to SMEs and private sector development
11Obstacles to SMEs and private sector development
-- taxation
- Improved tax system SMEs under presumptive
taxation - Progressive tax system may discourage creation of
highly profitable firms
12The most problematic factors for doing business
(ACR, 2009)
13Informal sector
- Large and dualistic informal sector
- Most SMEs in Ethiopia operate in the informal
sector - The informal sector consists mostly of
low-productive firms concentrated in
manufacturing and trade - Some successful small-scale enterprises also
operate in the informal sector (small-scale
manufacturing) - This more dynamic tier employs more educated
workers - Substantial wage gap exists between the formal
and the informal sector (30) - Women and uneducated population tend to be
disproportionately represented in the informal
economy
14Ethiopia Informal sector establishments, by
region and industry (2003)
15Frictions in the urban labor market
- Skill shortages -- relatively high returns to
education - Unemployment affected the highly-skilled workers
less, with the notably lower rate for workers
with tertiary education (9 percent vs. 23 percent
total rate in 2004) - But unemployment rates of young people with high
school and some higher education has been on the
rise - Lack of labor market information about available
jobs/searchers - Use of the exchange offices low (only 6 percent
of searchers in 1999) and declining, reflecting
low trust of the public in this service
16The Model
- Labor Reallocation with Firm Creation
- Shows the impact of quality of institutions,
specifically (i) business environment and (ii)
lacking labor market institutions on - SME start ups and skilled employment
- Firms decision to operate in the formal or the
informal sector - Focuses on drivers of firm creation, it does not
try to explain why some countries adopted a
particular institutional set ups faster than
others
17Literature context
- 2 streams of literature
- Search approach to labor markets
- Generally, Mortensen and Pissaridies from 1990s
on -- most common approach to labor/macro
analysis today - Specifically, Snower (1996) externalities in
labor markets of developed countries - Models of entrepreneurship
- Brixiova, Li, Yousef (2009) in the context of
Central Europe, with a focus on skill shortages
model with perfectly competitive labor markets
no informal sector draws also on earlier work - Related to Gelb et. al. (2008) model of
entrepreneurship in Africa, emphasize differences
in tax monitoring and cost of concealment
18The Model Set up
- There are two types of agents, entrepreneurs and
workers, with populations and - Agents live for 1 period, are endowed with 1 unit
of time, have risk-neutral preferences - Entrepreneurs search for business
opportunities search costs them
and results in probability x of finding one
still need to find skilled workers - Workers acquire skills, which costs them
still need to find skilled
jobs, which happens with probability
- wage determined through
bargaining - Output produced according to
19The Model equilibrium conditions
20The Model optimal allocation
21Informal sector
- Profit of a firm changes to
- Firms choice of a sector to operate in
- Impact of policies
- subsidies to entrepreneurs search s
- subsidies to skilled employment
22Equilibrium conditions with informal sector and
subsidies
23Impact of subsidies
- Search subsidy
- Paid to the potential firms reduces cost of
search increases entrepreneurs net profits
(i.e. profit less search cost) stimulates
start-ups - does not influence decision about sectors (formal
vs. informal) - Wage subsidy
- Paid to the existing firms increases after-tax
profit party captured by workers and hence it
also raises training incentives - Influences decision in which sector to operate
- Needs to be sufficiently large to make a
difference - Financing matters
24Impact of unclear property rights
- Denoting probability of expropriation as
- Efficiency component in the production function
becomes -
- Entrepreneurs now more likely to opt for the
informal sector since the expected profit in the
formal sector is reduced by the possibility of
expropriation
25Conclusions and further research
- Conclusions
- In countries such as Ethiopia, where the private
sector (including informal one) is
underdeveloped, subsidies to entrepreneurs
search may encourage start-ups - They would be more effective than wage subsidies
to the existing firms, but still need to be
accompanied by improvements to the business
environment and functioning of the labor market. - Since unclear property rights constitute
potentially the most severe form of taxation,
reforming them is key. Wage subsidies less
effective/more costly than reforms of business
environment - Further research
- Impact of credit constraints (internal as well as
shortages of forex)