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Title: Alejandro Mungaray


1
Paris International Conference on
Education, Economy and Society 2008
Measuring the Contribution of Service
Learning Programs in Microenterprises
  • By
  • Alejandro Mungaray
  • Martin Ramirez Urquidy
  • Michelle Texis
  • David Ledezma
  • Natanael Ramirez
  • UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE BAJA CALIFORNIA, Mexico.
  • Paris, France on July, 2008.

2
BACKGROUND
  • Micro and small firms are an important feature of
    the industrial structure of most countries 85-99
  • In developing economies, overwhelming presence of
    microenterprises (MEs), a subset of the informal
    sector run by modest entrepreneurs in survival
    activities.

Establishments ()
Mexico
Employment ()
3
BACKGROUND
  • Governments and international development
    agencies have recognized their importance and are
    placing emphasis on promoting MEs as a
    market-based strategy for employment and poverty
    alleviation
  • Support programs have been proposed to overcome
    human capital constraints in MEs and improve
    their performance, by offering Business
    Development Services (BDS), which are aimed at
    developing skills and knowledge.
  • BDS Financial and Non-Financial Services

4
BACKGROUND
  • BDS training, technology transfer, marketing
    assistance, business advice, mentoring and
    information
  • Financial Services Microfinance, other
    services Deposit, payments.
  • Non-Financial Services Assets for
    livelihood, particularly human capital, by
    developing skills and knowledge.
  • BDS support programs has been evaluated in
    different ways under different set of indicators,
    responding to their goals and interests.

5
THE PAPER AIMS
  • Research question
  • To what extend service learning programs
    contribute to improve performance of low value
    added MEs?
  • In answering this question, the research
    assesses the impact of the Program for Research,
    Assistance and Teaching of Small Enterprises
    (PRATS), Mexican Service Learning Program in MEs.
  • The research proposes estimating learning
    curves applied to average costs, revenues and
    profits, with the use of time series data from
    the enterprises supported by PRATS

6
IMPACT ASSESSMENT SYSTEMS
  • The impact assessment is embedded on the wider
    concept Comprehensive Evaluation.
  • A comprehensive evaluation is defined in the
    literature as an evaluation that includes
    monitoring, process evaluation, cost-benefit
    evaluation, and impact assessment.. (Beker,
    2000)
  • An impact assessment system (IAS) can be defined
    as a set of internal and/or external indicators
    representing the performance of a BDS provider in
    terms of several areas.

7
IMPACT ASSESSMENT SYSTEMS
  • IAS attempts to determine whether the program had
    the intended effects on individuals, households,
    and institutions attributable to the program
    intervention, and also unintended positive and
    negative consequences on beneficiaries.
  • IASs questions
  • Can BDS produce more sustainable increases
    in microenterprise productivity than credit
    alone?
  • To what extend the program reaches the
    intended population and impacts the targeted
    population?
  • How did the project affect the
    beneficiaries?
  • Were any improvements a direct result of
    the project, or would they have improved anyway?

8
IMPACT ASSESSMENT SYSTEMS
  • IES Classification (Baker,2000) Quantitative
    and Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • Requires estimating the counterfactual, what
    would have happened had the project never taken
    place or what otherwise would have been true?.
  • Control groups observations of the same
    population selected randomly, among those not
    intervened with the project.
  • Qualitative
  • Assesses conditions as they are perceived by
    beneficiaries of the projects
  • Provide insights into the ways in which
    households and local communities perceive a
    project and how they are affected by it

9
PRATS
  • Community Service program in favor of
    Microenterprises, which implements Service
    Learning
  • What is Service Learning?
  • Derivation of Learning-by-Doing extending
    the general concept of Community Service, to
    include learning component that may carry
    academic units or may be part of a specific
    course requirement
  • Service-learning is a method of
    experiential learning that links the classroom
    with the local community, and requires students
    to spend time in volunteer service and relate
    their experiences to the educational knowledge
    they see in the classroom (McGoldrick, 1998).

10
PRATS
  • Students in Service Learning
  • Learn and develop themselves trough active
    participation in communitarian experiences
  • Apply the concepts and instruments recently
    acquired to help their community
  • Contribute to solve community problems, important
    for development

11
PRATS
  • Objectives
  • Delivering BDS in situ at no cost to unprivileged
    enterprises
  • Doing research on topics related to small firms
  • Building up a model of teaching-learning for
    students in the field of Economics, and
    surrounding disciplines

12
Basic Elements
Services
PRATS
13
ASSISTANCE MODEL
PRATS
MEs Search Listing
Students Recruiting
Analysis and Evaluation
Students Training
Assistance Stage
-Final year enrollment -Registered in Small Firm
Analysis -Enrolled in PRATS
-Macroeconomic Context -ME development -Institutio
nal context -Market analysis -Marketing -Theory
of Production -Theory of costs.
-Finance -Strategic planning -Evaluation of
Investment Projects
-No accounting system -No formal management -Not
supported by any assistance program -Up to high
school -Underprivileged neighborhoods

-Financial statements -Cost statement -Proforma
statements -Net Cash flows -Financial ratios
-Learning Curves -Students Learning -Software
(SAM) -Enterprise Report
-Agreement -Diagnosis -Field Reports -Schedule
of Indicators
14
PARTICIPATING STUDENTS AND SUPPORTED ENTERPRISES
2001-2007
1573 Microenterprises 981 Students
15
PARTICIPATING CONSULTANTS AND SUPPORTED
ENTERPRISES BY REGION 2001-2007
Baja California
Sonora
Baja California Sur
Sinaloa
Yucatán
México City
Nayarit
16
THE MES IMPACT EVALUATION METHOD OF PRATS
  • Method
  • It is quantitative in that it attempts to
    determine the effects derived form the project on
    MEs.
  • Can any improvements be considered direct
    result of the project?
  • Relies on data collected by the consultant
    students on a daily basis over a 12 week horizon,
    with the use of the Schedule of Indicators.
  • The impact is measured using learning curves
    arranged to fit three basic dimensions of MEs.

17
THE MES IMPACT EVALUATION METHOD OF PRATS
  • Three dimensions
  • Technical (Average cost, Ct)
  • Market (Revenues, Rt)
  • Profitability (Profits, pt )
  • Notion of learning curve play an important role
    in the statistical significance of the results

18
THE MES IMPACT EVALUATION METHOD OF PRATS
  • Learning curves arranged to fit the three
    dimensions are equations 1, 2 (or 2a) and 3

19
THE MES IMPACT EVALUATION METHOD OF PRATS
  • The change of the relevant variables
    (Average cost, revenues and profits) are
    dependent upon
  • The evolution of experience or cumulative output
    (nt-1)
  • Associated with the period of
    intervention
  • The scale or output (yt)
  • Controls for some variables affecting
    performance which are related to the activity
    level of the enterprises, separating the
    learning component which is supposed to be the
    result of the assistance during participation in
    the program

20
THE MES IMPACT EVALUATION METHOD OF PRATS
The method determines the presence of
statistically significant changes in the
performance variables Ct, Rt and Profits (pt)
during program intervention and enterprise
participation Equations 1-3 are estimated by
ordinary least square The impact of the
assistance is determined econometrically by
analyzing the overall significance of the model
in terms of F-test, which test jointly the
parameters in the multiple regressions and
verifying the theoretically expected signs for
learning to take place ß1 0, F1 0
and a1 0
21
THE SAMPLE
MEs in the sample This sample was selected from
425 MEs registered in the program. Not all
having enough number of time series to perform
analysis Some enterprises may have accepted to
participate in the program and as intervention
progressed they either refused to provide
data Exit the market or switch to different
activity Showed intermittent business The
consultant students drop the project and the
associated academic units
22
THE SAMPLE
The assessment method is applied to 220 MEs
participating in PRATS from the Mexican sates of
Baja California and Nayarit. The MEs were
supported during different points in time a long
2001-2007 period. MEs had at least 20 time
series to the perform assessment, the number of
daily observations of the assessed MEs ranges
from 20 to 84. Female entrepreneurs represents
the majority (60), whereas males the remaining
40.
23
THE SAMPLE
The activities of MEs in sample are Processed
food, 50.4 Metal products, 5.7 Services, 17.2
Commerce, 26.7 Annual income in 2003 prices
averaged 107,240 pesos for female and 167,656
for male entrepreneurs, which corresponds to an
income per employee of 56,468 and 88,240
respectively. These figures are about 50 of
formal MEs counterparts in Mexico.
24
THE SAMPLE
The enterprises have been under five years of
operation 73, with a significant proportion of
having been operated for one year, 25. The MEs
are basically self-employment units employing few
workers. The MEs employ 1 to 3 workers, 80.
The average worker age per MEs, including the
owner, ranges 16 to 78 years.
25
RESULTS
65 of the enterprises benefited at least in
one dimension
26
DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
  • MEs exhibiting learning
  • Good consulting
  • High returns from knowledge transfer to low
    educated MEs
  • Refreshing flow of ideas complementing the
    experience of the entrepreneurs, (they can not
    focus on planning)
  • Continuous learning

27
CONCLUSIONS
  • The contribution of service learning strategies
    to support microenterprises was approached
    through the estimation of learning curves in
    three different dimensions technical, market,
    and profitability.
  • Method attempts to measure the extent to which
    the MEs benefited form BDS delivered through
    service learning programs
  • The assessment method suggested that 67 of the
    MEs benefited in at least one dimension, whereas
    49, 35 y 39 benefited in terms of the
    technical dimension, market dimension, and
    profitability dimension.

28
CONCLUSIONS
  • Human capital provision for livelihood is a
    fundamental right, so schemes should be developed
    in order to provide basic BDS off the market in
    order to get many MEs in the market.
  • The Service Learning program PRATS has played a
    role in this discussion by delivering
    economically BDS to this segment of MEs, as a
    reciprocity act based on a compensating
    institution of CS.
  • The experience of PRATS evidence that S-L
    programs in Higher Education can impact community
    (MEs), so they can be oriented toward
    development.

29
CONCLUSIONS
  • CS programs like PRATS have the potential to
    benefit developing countries in three ways
  • Deepening the social returns of public resources
    devoted to higher education.
  • Complementing industrial policy with specific
    programs providing BDS economically, suitable to
    the increasing sector of Mes
  • Improving the teaching-learning process in HEI.

30
  • Merci !!
  • Thank you !!
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