i. Local Economic Development and Employment creation through Micro and Small Enterprise Promotion
In Africa, unemployment, under-employment, international
competition and failed development initiatives have heightened the importance of
entrepreneurship and small enterprise development. Decentralised decision making
has increased the need for endogenous development, controlled development
from within which focuses on local resources, institutions and economic
activities. Controlled development from within increases the importance of small
firms as generators of employment. Thus small enterprises, local communities and
their surrounding regions are key units of development and job creation.
Local Economic Development (LED) Approach
Taking into consideration the full advantage of existing assets
and the potential for economic development potential in a given area, the
promotion of SME constitutes a means of generating employment. This, however,
has to be done in a balanced and comprehensive way, following the logic of the
market and according to common guidelines and recommendations for local and
regional development.
The main elements of the LED Methodology are:
· consensus
building;
· bottom-up approach;
· human and institutional capacity building;
· search for synergy and catalyst effects;
· globalisation of the local level; and
· public awareness raising.
True to the LED methodology, 'Consensus Building' has to be done
through an active participation of the relevant socio-economic and political
actors at the local level. This means that a process which unites and creates
collaborative linkages amongst local actors across political and cultural
differences has to be created, ensuring a constructive exchange of ideas and
opinions aiming at designing policies for sustainable development of the project
area.
The 'bottom-up' approach mobilises to the utmost the local human
potential making them part of and responsible for the local economic development
process. As these activities are conceived as endogenous rather than exogenous
processes, the sustainability of initiated project and programme activities is
ensured.
Synergy and catalytic effects must be used in order to create
trust and co-responsibility amongst the local actors the long-term goals of
programmes. Therefore, it is of extreme importance to make sure that short-term,
concrete and visible results (impacts) are achieved. Setting of 'good examples'
contributes to raise the level of motivation and awareness of the target
population. These examples though, must have such characteristics that they can
be easily repeated.
'Globalisation of the Local Level' refers to the incorporation
of the local experiences into a wider frame work of laws and regulations at the
national level. The LED methodology wants to prevent the creation of isolated
technical exercises which can not be repeated or united in overall strategic
development policies.
In the context of the actual project 'Public Awareness Raising'
will lead to the creation of a more appropriate entrepreneurial culture and a
low-risk atmosphere. It is one of the most difficult aspects of the LED as it is
dealing with the mentality of the people at all levels. It is exactly there that
the major changes have to be established in order to guarantee sustainability of
development. It is also at this point that the major obstacles and problems are
to be found.
In order to attain the global sustainable development of the
local economy, consensus and discussion are the main requirements among
different local actors in the private and public sector, between the members of
these sectors and at the local and national level. This consensus should lead to
the provision of a supportive policy framework, the development of financial
schemes to enable entrepreneurs to take up small enterprises and the provision
of training to develop entrepreneurial and technical skills, which are
considered necessary conditions to develop the local community.
Beneficiaries
The target group consists of representatives and decision makers
of local public bodies responsible for local economic and social development,
potential business starters, entrepreneurs of all branches (men and women) and
business associations.
Small and medium enterprises are characterised by their
flexibility which permits them to evolve even in small markets. Beginning with
the regional market's potential by using their regional comparative advantage,
the SMEs have the possibility to grow and expand their markets in the regions.
Branches with high potential of development based on local resources, food
processing, textile, repair and services offer good possibilities for growth.
Tourism (in a broad sense) also offers a great opportunity of allowing the
development of family-owned and managed enterprises that can provide
income-generating work for many, including women and young people.
SME support and promotion through Business Promotion and
Support Centres (BPSC)
An enabling political environment, the development of financial
schemes to enable entrepreneurs to take up small enterprises and the provision
of training to develop entrepreneurial (mentality) and technical skills are
considered to be three basic conditions to guarantee a sustainable development
of the local economy. In order to attain this, consensus and thus discussion are
one of the main requirements; consensus and discussion among different local
actors in the private and public sector, between the private and public sector
and between the local and the national level.
In this context Business Promotion and Support Centres will be
promoting and supporting SME's, with a view to maximizing employment growth and
improving the standards of competitiveness of the SME's in the given area. This
will be done by:
1. Promoting an entrepreneurial culture,
where potential business men become aware of what is means to have a proper
business, learn about the responsibilities, risks and possibilities. The lack of
a market oriented 'Business Mentality' can partly be overcome by introducing
very practically oriented training material, introducing the basics of
entrepreneurship on a step-by-step basis. In the context of the Action Plan
training material will be further developed and up-graded. The process to
develop the practical oriented training material will be based on a constant
dialogue with and feedback from the target group, the business starters. Apart
from the development of new training material, and the introduction of
participatory training activities, an effective monitoring and follow-up
mechanism will have to be established in order to guarantee to the most the
success of the business starters;
2. Providing locally-based comprehensive support to potential
or actual small and medium entrepreneurs, introducing information, new
management techniques, as well as new technologies. These services will
facilitate guidance and assistance in formulating business ideas and selecting
feasible business projects, implementing new enterprises or rehabilitating
existing ones, following up and counselling on the entrepreneurs' operations
with a view to consolidating their sustainability and assisting in the promotion
and marketing of the product on an international level;
3. Mobilising opportunities and resources, setting up
guidelines and procedures to facilitate access to credit and incentives for
employment generation and training. As there are several special credit schemes
for micro and small entrepreneurs in the pipeline with different international
programmes and organisations, a special credit fund or financial mechanisms are
foreseen in the context of this proposal;
4. Stimulating and supporting a 'dialogue' at the local
level, between public and private sector aimed at promoting private
entrepreneurship, in order to create a relation of confidence between the
local public organisations and the private sector; and
5. Contributing to and facilitation of a more appropriate
environment at the national level by creating Association of Development
Agencies and Business Centres, through which the interests of the SME's will
be regulated, protected and represented at the national - political -
level.
The basic orientation of BPSC's activities will be towards the
identification and implementation of profitable, efficient and organised
entrepreneurial activities, that contribute to a local economic and employment
development. It will support those activities or projects which associate best
with the economic potential of the area, utilising endogenous resources,
stimulating multiplier effects towards the local economy.
In other words, the main tasks of the BPSC's will be:
· orientation and
motivation to stimulate local economic initiatives;
· assist in the preparation of business plans for
private enterprises;
· intermediate in the
provision of credit;
· support and strengthen
already existing enterprises;
· stimulate
product diversification;
· provide training
and technical assistance; and
· maintain
relations with national and international institutions for technical and/or
financial support.
These tasks will have to be performed within a by-all parties
agreed logical frame work for the development of the local economy. The BPSC's
will operate as a catalyst in a discussion forum or as a Local Planning
mechanism, operating as a canal, from the bottom up, for the interests of the
local entrepreneurs (maximising the utilisation of local resources and
potentials and aiming at the satisfaction of local economic needs, always on the
basis of consensus).
The BPSC's will though only be capable of entering into a
valuable partnership with national and international partners and can only
contribute to the increasing problems of unemployment, underemployment, poverty
and the deterioration of living and working standards, if they receive the
appropriate technical and financial assistance in local capacity building. This
means that assistance is required to up-grade and develop the institutional,
human, managerial and financial capacities and skills at a local level which
will lead to an empowerment of the local societies as a
whole.