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How Do Women Entrepreneurs Perform? Empirical Evidence from Egypt

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  • Fatma El-Hamidi

    (Department of Economics & GSPIA, University of Pittsburgh, USA)

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is twofold: 1) To explain how women owned MSEs differ from men owned MSEs in terms of human and financial capital; 2) To what extent do these differences/similarities affect the performance of the MSE? Using econometric techniques (i.e. logistical analysis), the analysis in this study is based on the 2003 MSE dataset made available by the ERF (Economic Research Forum of the Middle East and North Africa, Iran and Turkey). The sample size consists of 5000 private MSEs. The paper evaluates the effect of aspects of human and financial capitals on three measures of performance of MSEs in Egypt for men and women. Measures of performance are: growth (increase in employment from one year ago); success (rise in revenues from one year ago); and efficiency (growth in returns on sales (ROS) from one year ago). Preliminary findings show gender differences in terms of general, and specific human capital, as well as financial capital, where women are at a disadvantage. Empirical findings reveal that women are better performers than men in generating revenues, despite the fact that their revenues are almost one third their males’ counterparts. What’s more interesting is that women are no different from men in terms of employment growth or the efficiency of running their businesses.

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  • Fatma El-Hamidi, 2011. "How Do Women Entrepreneurs Perform? Empirical Evidence from Egypt," Working Papers 621, Economic Research Forum, revised 09 Jan 2011.
  • Handle: RePEc:erg:wpaper:621
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    2. Brixiová, Zuzana & Kangoye, Thierry & Said, Mona, 2020. "Training, human capital, and gender gaps in entrepreneurial performance," Economic Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 85(C), pages 367-380.
    3. Hala El-Said & Mahmoud Al-Said & Chahir Zaki, 2013. "What Determines the Access to Finance of SMEs? Evidence from the Egyptian Case," Working Papers 752, Economic Research Forum, revised May 2013.
    4. Hadi Salehi Esfahani & Roksana Bahramitash, 2015. "Gender, Enterprise Ownership, and Labor Allocation in MENA: the Roles of Islam, Oil, and Government Policies," Working Papers 951, Economic Research Forum, revised Sep 2015.
    5. Seamus Murphy & Diksha Arora & Froukje Kruijssen & Cynthia McDougall & Paula Kantor, 2020. "Gender-based market constraints to informal fish retailing: Evidence from analysis of variance and linear regression," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(3), pages 1-16, March.
    6. Charles Ackah & Richard Osei Bofah & Derek Asuman, 2017. "Who Are Africa’S Entrepreneurs? Comparative Evidence From Ghana And Uganda," Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship (JDE), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 22(04), pages 1-23, December.
    7. Nesma Ali & Boris Najman, 2016. "Informal Competition, Firms Productivity and Policy Reforms in Egypt," Working Papers 1025, Economic Research Forum, revised Jul 2016.
    8. Hala Abou-Ali & Reham Rizk, 2015. "MSEs Informality and Productivity: Evidence from Egypt," Working Papers 916, Economic Research Forum, revised May 2015.
    9. Mona Farid Badran, PhD, 2014. "Access and use of ICT in female-owned SMEs in selected Arab Countries and Brazil: A comparative study," Working Papers 2014/12, Maastricht School of Management.

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