PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF ESTABLISHING SMALL SCALE ENTERPRISES IN NIGERIA
(A CASE STUDY OF SELECTED BAKERIES IN ENUGU URBAN)
ABSTRACT
It also paid attention to the foundling of the small scale
enterprises in Nigeria. Whereas failure of the large-scale import department
assembly to propel the country into a satisfactory course of industrialization
necessitate the demagnification of strategy to embrace the promotion of small
scale enterprises achievement under the new strategy has not been adequate with
expectations of the stated objectives which were economic growth and
development through the mobilization of available local resources, employment
generation and industrial dispersal as well as mitigation of rural urban
migration. Out of a population of eighty drawn from the selected bakeries,
sixty seven were selected as the sample size using statistical sample tools
(Taro Yamani). A questionnaire was designed and distributed to elicit
information from the sample population; also data was sourced through primary
and secondary sources. These data collected were presented and analyzed by
means of tables and percentages. The hypotheses adduced were tested using such
tools as chi-square. It was observed that to achieve economic growth and
development to use, such as increasing availability of credit by raising interest
rate ceiling and permitting a “spread” that makes it worthwhile for banks to
lend to small scale enterprises or by increasing the number and range of
investment etc. problems of small scale enterprises will be a thing of the
past.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCITION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The contribution of small –scale business in fostering
economic growth and development has been well articulated in different areas of
this study .the specific attention on them based on their expected impact and
potential contribution on broad and diversified production base, as well as
their accelerative effect in achieving macro objectives pertaining to full
employment, income distribution and the development of local technology. They
are particularly most conducive for diffusion of management skills and
emulation of indigenous entrepreneurship overtime.
Small scale enterprises provides financial opportunity and a
chance to develop wealth. It is a place where creative, motivated individuals
can use their talents and expertise to the fullest, because it provides
satisfying careers and job opportunities and it’s also the back bone of the
market economy of the word. Every big business starts as a small business, and
it started with an entrepreneur (small business), who at first, earns little or
no profit. It was the new ideas of small scale enterprises that brought about
Ekene Dili Chukwu Transport, the FAN Milk, Nnewi “Tokumbo” parts, and even the
many commercial banks in Nigeria. Untried ideas become annulations that become concepts
that changed the business world. And so it goes. Small scale enterprises is the
basis for the economic well being many developed nations including USA/Japan.
Entrepreneurship is what makes a small business successful.
Entrepreneurship occurs when an individual develops a new venture, a new
approach to an old business or idea, or a unique way of giving the market place
a product or service by using resources in a new way under conditions of risk.
Small business triumphs and entrepreneurship are closely related to it. It is
difficult to separate them.
The unemployment situation in the country coupled with the
new government instinctive towards easing social tensions among unemployed
youths, through the programmed of the National Directorate of Employment (NDE),
were intended to lure a lot of unemployed Nigerians, including graduates into
self determination through self employment.
Graduates and school leavers are now realizing that
government and the established private companies are not ready to come to their
aid directly, through paid employment due to the dividing state of the economy.
Short of the alternatives, Nigerians including our graduates are therefore
launching themselves into various small-scale business ventures, such as
cottage soap and cosmetics production, fairing, restaurants, fast food,
publishing, writing, block making, garri processing, food processing, refuse
disposal, taxi driving, cleaning services, weaving, baking tailoring,
advertising and other same business venture which depends mostly on local raw
materials. The determination to succeed is also fast becoming the order of the
day.
Government has been playing appreciative role in promoting
the survival and growth of small-scale enterprise in recognition of them
flexible and adaptive nature as well as their re-generative power in promoting
economic growth and development. Government also encourages people to establish
their own small business so as to reduce the problem of unemployment in the
country and also reduce the problem of importation of goods, more so, to
produce exportation products.
Government in believing that a dynamic and growing small
manufacturing sub-sector can contribute significantly to the implementation of
a wide range development effectives, has thus enunciated various policies to
encourage their proliferation and make them veritable engines of growth and
development. In the third and for the development plans and the on-going three
years rolling plan, priority has been accorded industrialization with greater
emphasis on small scale enterprises. The basic activities of government
policies as maintained in the monetary and fiscal policy measures, are to
improve the financing and other supportive services of small-scale business by
expanding and improving access to credit and infrastructural facilities,
reducing their production costs, boosting their profitability, enhancing their
survival and growth capacities as well as expanding their contributions to
non-oil exports by making their products competitive in the export markets.
Hardly could any major industry succeed without the services
of small-business enterprise. The major goals of any profit oriented business
are to make profit. A company will make more profit if statistics its customers
need better them the competitors. Therefore in the contribution of small-scale
business, bakeries would produce what the customers want and by so doing they
maximize profit and only bakeries that are effective and efficient can satisfy
customer’s needs. In reality, it is possible to run a business without profit
for a time, but it is not possible for to survive for one day without
customers. Customers are the central theme of any business. Without a total
commitment to them, contribution to economic growth and development will have
limited and brief effects.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Bakery is in the production industry the quality of products
rendered by our Bakeries have been attracting criticisms from people in all
works of life. The civil servants, business men and the general public are all
very critical of production of cookies like bread, chi-chin, cake, meat pie,
boons etc. The complaints ranges from those of poor quality of products, poor
packages, high prices, poor delivery, shortage of skilled manpower which
affects productivity and restrain expansive the use of potassium bromated which
National Agency for food and Drug Administration Commission (NAFDAC) banned for
health purpose.
Most bakeries do not put their customers in the prime place
as they supposed to be. There is now keen competition and to compete means to
contribute to economic growth and development. Dickson (1971:4), agreed with
this view when he said that small scale enterprises are ploughed by
inadequacies and serious miss-uses of business records and business
information. The problem of poor or wrong location of an industry affects its
production. Such as nearness to raw materials, market, sources of power and
access to supply of labour and transport facilities etc.
Government incentive in industries has previously directed to
public investment neglecting private initiative. But a diversified and
self-sufficient economy must take into consideration the importance of private
sector in capital formation.
1.3 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
Based on the fact that one cannot build a house on a platter
of gold without encountering one or two hassles here and there, so in the
genesis and revelation of this work as the researcher encountered several
problems the course of writing, which ranges from lack of time, financial and
material constraints to the inability of reaching all members of the sample due
to transport problems and even those reached tend not to render full
co-operation thus the total number of people interviewed became smaller.
Other limitations which the researcher encountered in the
course of writing are that some of questionnaires distributed to the
respondents were not returned despite one or two reminders sent to them, while
those that were delivered by hand were non-challantly filled. As such, there
have been criticisms about the bakery industries in the way they render
services to their customers. i.e. They do not see the customers as king lot in
terms of national output and employment. Moreover, Nigeria has various policies
on small-scale enterprises in recent National development plan and also in the
structural Adjustment programmed (SAP). The researcher wants to carry out a
research on what bakeries do and the role they play in economic growth and
development the researcher also wants to have an idea base either to support
all the sources about the poor impression people have on how to improve their
production so as to contribute effectively in national economic growth and
development.
Bakeries can do more individualized jobs for customers and
thereby attract them on the basis of specialty product quality and personal
services rather than on the impersonal of price or mass production of largely
identical business. Based on the above, the need for studying this topic is to
show the effectiveness of small-scale business in national economic growth and
development.
1.4 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
The importance of small scale business in the promotion of
economic growth and development has always been at the forefront of development
strategies. However, many developing countries have failed to adopt this
strategy owing to their belief that it is a relatively show process of
industrialization which may not be very compatible with their desire to “catch
up” with the industrial countries. This along with the relative availability of
foreign exchange (particularly through foreign grants and export of basic
commodities) in the early days of independence has encourage many of those
countries to follow a different mode of industrialization for transition from a
largely gravis ion society to a modern industrial sector including Nigeria,
adopted import substitution strategy of industrialization aimed mainly at
producing domestically consumer goods that were erstwhile imported. This
strategy of industrialization often requires continuous dependence on major
supplier’s over-seas for the provision raw materials and spare parts needed for
uninterrupted production in these industries.
Therefore, the aim of this study is to know:
1. Whether
or not small scale business provides opportunities for individual freedom and
economic growth and development.
2. To
know if small business community makes a significant contribution to our total
economic system as suggested earlier
3. To
find out whether or not bakery industry contribute to the economic growth and
development of the country.
4. If
customers are satisfied by the services tendered by bakeries
5. To
formulate business strategies and make recommendations that would be more
effective in bakery industries.
1.5 RESEARCH HYPOTHESES
To
guide the investigation of the issue raise in the problem definition. It is
hypothesized that:
HYPOTHESIS 1
H0: Small-scale industry does not contribute to economic growth & Development
H1: Small-scale industry contributes to economic growth development.
H0: Small-scale industry does not contribute to economic growth & Development
H1: Small-scale industry contributes to economic growth development.
HYPOTHESIS 2
Ho: Lack of finance is the major problem facing small-scale business
Hi: Small-scale business does not have any problem in terms of Finance.
Ho: Lack of finance is the major problem facing small-scale business
Hi: Small-scale business does not have any problem in terms of Finance.
HYPOTHESIS 3
Ho: Bakeries do not encourage the use of local resources in larger
Scale in Nigeria
Hi: Bakeries encourage the use of local resources in larger scale in Nigeria
Ho: Bakeries do not encourage the use of local resources in larger
Scale in Nigeria
Hi: Bakeries encourage the use of local resources in larger scale in Nigeria
1.6 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
This study is very timely, especially today that all hand is
on desk to enhance the development and growth of the Nigeria’s economy through
the small scale enterprises. This study will be of immense benefits to cottage
enterprises as well as other small and medium scale enterprise.
Furthermore, the research work will serve as a secondary data
to future researches on small and medium scale enterprises.
Finally, this work is of importance to the researcher in the
following ways.
1. It
will expose and enable him to know more about the organization. Enterprises
under study.
2. It
will enable him to more about the role, which small and medium scale
enterprises play in Nigeria.
3. It
will also enable him to know the different meaning/definitions and
classifications of small and medium scale enterprises.
1.7 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
The
scope of this study i.e. small scale enterprise is very wide it had to be
carried out in all small-scale industries in Nigeria.
1.8 LIMITATION OF THE STUDY
The
study is therefore limited to bakeries industries in Enugu Urban because of
time and material resources to see to the whole nation.
1.9 DEFINITION OF TERMS
NAFDAC:
National Agency for Food and Drug Administration Commission
SAP: Structural Adjustment Programmed
SAP: Structural Adjustment Programmed
REFERENCES
Aguolu,
P. S. (1998). Financial Management, 2nd Edition, Aba: Model Academic Publishers
Ltd
Harry,
D. & Melane, E. (1993). Core Business Studies Finance, London: Mike
Mardes Publishers Ltd
Mardes Publishers Ltd
Uche,
C. (1996). Principle of Public Finance, 1st Edition, Onitsha: Constrag
Communication Ltd
Communication Ltd
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