学习财务和商业技能,促进南非非正规街头贸易中女性必需品企业家的可持续发展

M. Cloete, S. Maistry, Shakila Singh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以西方为中心的以机会为基础的创业研究主导了关于女性企业家的文献。现有的研究也倾向于把重点放在正式部门而不是非正式部门妇女的经历上。在本文中,我们考察了女性必需品企业家在南非非正规街头贸易中学习金融和商业技能的经验。本研究的理论框架位于批判性女权主义范式中,并使用了女权主义现象学设计,借鉴了非洲女权主义、弹性和非正式学习。对在夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省德班地区从事非正规街头贸易的12名妇女进行了现象学的、深入的面对面访谈,以了解她们经营企业的经验精髓。主要调查结果表明,贫穷的黑人妇女,特别是那些在非正规街头交易中没有许可证的人,面临着多重挑战,但能够学习一些生存所必需的金融和商业技能。然而,这种学习是被动的、以问题为中心的、基于观察的、模仿的和部分的。这些调查结果强调,这些企业家需要提高他们的财务和商业技能,以使他们的企业保持可持续发展。该研究建议了各种有针对性的政策举措,以支持女性必需品企业家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Learning Financial and Business Skills for the Sustainability of Female Necessity Entrepreneurs in the Informal Street Trade in South Africa
Western-centric studies on opportunity-based entrepreneurship have dominated the literature on female entrepreneurs. Existing research has also tended to focus on the experiences of women in the formal rather than the informal sector. In this article, we examine female necessity entrepreneurs' experiences of learning financial and business skills in the informal street trade in South Africa. The theoretical framework for this research, which was located within a critical feminist paradigm and used a feminist phenomenological design, drew on African feminisms, resilience, and informal learning. Phenomenological, in-depth, face-to-face interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of twelve women in the informal street trade in the Durban area of KwaZulu-Natal, to capture the essence of their experiences of running their businesses. The main findings showed that poor black women, especially those trading without permits in the informal street trade, faced multiple challenges, but were able to learn some of the financial and business skills necessary for survival. However, this learning was reactive, problem-centred, observation based, imitative, and partial. These findings emphasised the need for these entrepreneurs to upgrade their financial and business skills in order for their businesses to remain sustainable. The study recommended various targeted policy initiatives to support female necessity entrepreneurs.
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