Fr. 52.50

Entrepreneurs and SMEs in Rwanda - The Model Pupil Paradox

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

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List of contents

List of Tables

PART ONE
Chapter 1 Terminology, Research Focus and Methodology
Chapter 2 Theories of Entrepreneurship
PART TWO
Chapter 3 Rwanda: the Model Pupil?
PART THREE
Chapter 4 Successful Entrepreneurs, Finance and Planning
Chapter 5 Successful Entrepreneurs and Psychological Traits
PART FOUR
Chapter 6 Searching for the Proto-entrepreneur
Chapter 7 Aspiring Entrepreneurs’ Motives for Starting a Business
PART FIVE
Chapter 8 Resolving the Paradox
References

About the author

David Poole holds a PhD from SOAS, University of London, and an MBA from Imperial College Business School. He had a successful career as a marketing consultant and entrepreneur. The experience of heading a team of volunteers providing support to businesses in Rwanda sparked his interest in the country's efforts to catalyse economic development through entrepreneurship and SME sector development.

Summary

Entrepreneurs and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) have become the darlings of neoliberal development thinking, with the received wisdom being that such enterprises hold the key to the economic transformation of low-income countries. This thinking has profoundly influenced development policy in Rwanda, but has singularly failed to deliver the much anticipated emergence of a new class of entrepreneurs and a vibrant SME sector.

This book deconstructs the myths around entrepreneurship and SMEs, and reveals how neoliberal approaches towards microcredit and related programmes have failed to address the economic challenges facing countries like Rwanda. Drawing on his study of successful and aspiring entrepreneurs, Poole identifies the factors associated with successful entrepreneurship. He uncovers the unintended consequences of the entrepreneurship and SME development prescription, and offers key policy insights which have implications for Rwanda and beyond.

Foreword

Exposes current policy myths around entrepreneurs and development in Africa, demonstrating the counterproductive consequences of misguided policy.

Additional text

David Poole's careful research in Rwanda blows fresh air into the stale atmosphere of conventional wisdom about entrepreneurship. This book should be required reading for aid officials and government officials and it will help them question the waste of resources poured into misguided credit schemes and training programmes in so many countries.

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