Government, SMEs and Entrepreneurship Development: Policy, Practice and Challenges

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Routledge, Apr 22, 2016 - Business & Economics - 340 pages
Recent decades have seen substantial growth in the range of assistance programmes for SMEs and entrepreneurs across the world. Once regarded as peripheral to the economy and public policy, the role of small firms and of entrepreneurship is now recognized as of key importance in the economic growth and development strategies of many nations. The range of interventions and support focused on promoting SMEs and entrepreneurship is substantial and expanding, so Government, SMEs and Entrepreneurship Development asks ’what are some of the main policy instruments being used, and how effective are they?’ It considers policies in different countries, examines key interventions and tools used to promote entrepreneurship and SME development and concludes with contributions on how to best evaluate their effectiveness. The contributor chapters by academics and practitioners from businesses, enterprise development agencies and governments, are empirical or evidence-based and use both quantitative and qualitative approaches. Drawing on experience from a wide range of both developed and emerging countries and economies, the contributions focus on the broad strategies that different governments and communities have adopted to foster entrepreneurship and SMEs; the policy tools and instruments that can be used to promote small business and entrepreneurship; and on the outcomes of policy instruments and the methods used to evaluate interventions. Their findings will help researchers, policy-makers, economic development officers, civil servants, elected officials, and business associations to better understand the issues in this important field.

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Contents

List of Figures
1950
Foreword by Mark Prisk
1964
The Evolution of Enterprise Policy in Scotland
1982
SME Policy Development in New Zealand 19782008
1995
Trends and Challenges
2002
Prescribed Approaches and Dayto
5
SME and Entrepreneurship Policies in the Caribbean
Regulatory Reform and the Growth of Private Entrepreneurship
Some Policy
Some Lessons from British
An English Model of Small Business Advice
Distinctions and Challenges
Government Policy to Support Franchisees
Current Issues and Future Challenges
The Case of Enterprise Insights Local
Challenging Default Perspectives on Entrepreneurship and Small

SME Policies and Seasons of Change in the Peoples Republic of China
The Case of France
The Opportunities and
Pragmatic Approaches to Evaluating SME Policies and Programmes
Index
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About the author (2016)

Professor Robert Blackburn is Director of the Small Business Research Centre, Kingston University, UK. Robert has a wealth of experience researching entrepreneurship and SMEs including projects for the UK Treasury, the European Union, OECD and Barclays and HSBC banks. He is editor in chief of the International Small Business Journal and has published five books. Dr Michael Schaper is an Adjunct Professor at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia. He is a deputy chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, and was previously Small Business Commissioner for the Australian Capital Territory. Dr Schaper has been President of the Small Enterprise Association of Australia and New Zealand, and a director of the International Council for Small Business.

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