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Entrepreneurship
MGT602
VU
Lesson
45
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
& PAKISTAN
LEARNING
OBJECTIVES
1.
To
look at the history of entrepreneurship in
Pakistan
2.
To
understand the nature of policies in
industrialization.
3.
To
understand the profile of a typical entrepreneur in
Pakistan.
4.
To
learn the purpose of new
policies induction.
5.
To
identify different fields of
entrepreneurship...
6.
To
understand the value of Pakistani
entrepreneur in the region.
7.
To
illustrate some of the fundamental issues
related to woman
entrepreneurs...
8.
To
understand development made in woman
entrepreneurship.
9.
To
look at the over all
scenario of entrepreneurship in
Pakistan.
10.
Future
of entrepreneurship in Pakistan.
ENTREPRENEURS
IN PAKISTAN
Salient
Features of Entrepreneurs in Pakistan
are:
Age
Pattern
"The
mean age of entrepreneur was
found to be 42 years and of
their enterprises 12 years. It is
comparable
to
the Korean age pattern
(46)".
Corporate
status
Sole
owner: He
works with his own
hands combines the entrepreneur function
of initiating the business
making
investments, taking decisions
and performing managerial
functions".
Heritage:
"Caste
played an important role in
certain industries and on the
other hand heritage is
dominant.
But
overall it is much
diversified."
Educational
Level
"Differing
from industry to industry 60% have school
education and 30% have college or better
education
only
10% have professional or graduation
level".
Skills
Level
Majority
is skilled in family business Most of
training is as a family member.
Technically they are very
skilled
in heredity business. New generation has
professional education
Sizes
and Investment
"Majority
started in a small way with
less than 10 workers and
1/2 to 2/3 of the firms started
with less than
50,000
investments"
Growth
"The
growth was fast in case of
small firms than in large
firms".
Profitability
"Rate
of profit is higher in case of small
industries in comparison with the
large industries."
The
Industrial History of
Pakistan
Pakistan's
industrial history has been
dominated by a single-minded emphasis on industry
and that is of
large-scale
enterprises.
The
fall out of that development
strategy was formally adopted in the
60's as conscious policy
step in the
start
of second policy plan period
(1960-1965) has been large
scale industrial holdings, accounting
for
much
of the country's assets and capital.
The feeling among the masses is
that a few families control 70
to
80
percent of the country's assets, led to
political rebellion. That
rebellion also culminated in the
dismemberment
of the eastern part of the country.
The primary causes for that
tragedy, were
basically
economic
in nature.
The
upheaval also generated a parallel
economic thought, exclusive to the
peculiarities of Pakistan's
economy.
That economic thought
advocated across the board
nationalization of economic assets as
a
vehicle
for ensuring social justice
in the society.
The
fall out of that strategy
was two pronged:
Inefficient
labor
Shaken
Business Confidence
100
Entrepreneurship
MGT602
VU
The
reaction to that policy mix
in the early 1980's was revert
back to the Ayubian model of
economic
development.
The
model was characterized by:
Promotion
of large-scale units
Expansion
of large-scale enterprises
Banking
sector turned to cater to
large loans
The
IMF conditions and poor
recovery rate of huge borrowings
played a major role in creating a
negative
point
for the progress curve.
These constraints further
pushed the economy towards
recession, industry
towards
sickness and individual units
towards default. All these
factors precipitated the rethinking of
a
strategy
to revive the growth of
economy.
It
was due to non involvement
of banks that medium scale
and small-scale enterprises
has got the attention
of
the stakeholders i.e. the economic
managers and the private
sector. The development of SMEs
suits the
current
situation on account of the following
factors.
Low
overhead cost, low level of
financing
Lesser
pressure on the banking
system
Employment
generation
Entrepreneurial
development
Vendor
based development
Development
of large-scale industry on firm
basis
A
more just distribution of
resources and profits
The
pre-requisites for the development of SME
sector rest heavily on an infrastructure tuned to
support
such
developments that include:
A
banking system customized
for SME development
One
window operation
Currently,
our banking system continues
to be the large sector banker. Despite
talk of SME development
under
the auspices of SMEDA and development of
SME Bank and Khushali Bank,
the financial sector's
general
response has been influenced by the
security issue, i.e. against
which asset the bank would
be
advancing
loans to the small and
medium scale business
entity. In the absence of a customized
banking
setup,
the development in the SME sector so far
has been evolutionary and
not the result of any
conscious
activities.
The
growth of Pakistani entrepreneurship in
good in region and can be
compared with INDIA, Sri
Links
and
Malaysia I respect of
following
Rising
stars%
Lost
opportunity%
Pakistan
60.4
10
Sri
Lanka
57.1
38.7
India
52.3
29.3
Malaysia
59.6
27.7
101
Entrepreneurship
MGT602
VU
GENDER
DEVELOPMENT STATUS WOMAN AS AN
ENTREPRENEUR IN PAKISTAN
Each
of the two genders of any
society constitutes roughly
half of the population, and
Pakistan is no
exception.
People of both genders embody
not only labor force, but
also knowledge and creativity,
which
may
be mobilized, to achieve economic ends.
Discarding either of the genders, therefore, implies
foregoing
the
potential benefits, which
arise from mobilizing the
respective human resources
for development.
Pakistani
women have been engaged in
the production process for
ages. Their participation in
the
economic
activities in the modern society has also
progressed beyond agriculture into the
local market
economy.
Women are increasingly migrating to urban
areas for employment in a range of
cottage
industries,
such as carpet weaving, textiles
and handicrafts. In search
for wage employment, women
are
moving
into small business and
self-employment ventures thereby creating
many formal and
informal
opportunities
for work.
Women
entrepreneurship in the formalized sense, however,
remains a new concept. Our
current strategies
also
tend to focus on increasing
women's participation in the labor force.
The business environment
for
women
in Pakistan reflects a complex interplay
of many factors made up of
social, cultural, traditional
and
religious
elements. These have taken
shape over many centuries;
are anchored in patriarchal system
and are
clearly
manifested in the lower of women.
The form of constitutional
structures, policy
documents,
regulatory
arrangements and institutional
mechanisms is contemporary rather than
traditional, so it is
cosmetically
impartial.
Yet
the gender bias is rigid and
deep-rooted as it draws legitimacy from
the perpetuation of a traditional
mind-set,
established rituals and a firm
belief system. It has
conclusively been shown that
women business
owners
encounter more obstacles,
and face more risks,
financially, socially, economically,
culturally and
legally
than male business owners
face.
The
Government of Pakistan is well
aware of the potential of the women in
our society and the
contribution
they can make towards
economic development. Women are
continuously being encouraged to
enter
the business stream of the country
and are being provided
incentives. However, there
still is a strong
dearth
of focused initiatives that
need to be taken by existing business
facilitation institutions.
The
new scenario is giving rise
to woman as entrepreneur as they have
opened their own chamber
of
commerce.
The woman bank is in Place
and we can see lot of women
coming up in-services sector,
apparel,
education and many such
occupation.
102
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