Assessment Of Business Environment Of Women Involved In Micro, Small, And Medium Enterprises (Msmes) In The Philippines: A Comparative Study With Select Asean Countries
Assessment Of Business Environment Of Women Involved In Micro, Small, And Medium Enterprises (Msmes) In The Philippines: A Comparative Study With Select Asean Countries
Date
2020-08-29
Authors
Solina, Myrtle Faye
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Abstract
Background of the Study
The ASEAN Coordinating Committee on Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises
(ACCMSME) in 2020 cited that small and medium enterprises are key drivers and
contributors to economic growth, account for 88.8% to 99.9% of all establishments,
and generate between 51.7% and 97.2% of total employment. As such, the ASEAN
Economic Community (AEC) Blueprint 2025 stated that the region would give new
emphasis on assisting and promoting micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs)
in its economic integration through a more structured and targeted MSME program.
The program will be put in place to enhance MSME competitiveness, resilience, and
to enable more significant benefits from ASEAN integration through various
measures such as (a) promotion of productivity, use of technology, and adaption of
innovation; (b) increase access to finance by developing and enhancing current
framework, strengthening traditional infrastructure, enhancing policy environment
and measures that foster alternative and non-traditional financing; (c) enhance
market access and internationalization through the development of support schemes
and integration into the global supply chains, e.g., promotion of collaboration with
multinational corporations (MNCs) and large enterprises, foster the use of
e-Commerce, and boost strategies to promote exports through export clinics,
advisory services and rules of origin (ROO) utilization, and (d) enhance MSME policy
and regulatory environment that supports intra- and inter-governmental cooperation
and coordination mechanism through the involvement of MSMEs in the
decision-making process to enable better representation of MSME interests, extend assistance to
microenterprises in the informal sector and their integration, and streamline
processes involved in obtaining permits and business registrations to enable less
costly and faster business formation (ASEAN Secretariat, 2015).
True to its overarching message, ASEAN: A Community of Opportunities, the
region also recognizes the critical role of women in entrepreneurship. As such, the
Joint Statement of the Second ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on Women (AMMW)
issued in October 2015 in Manila recognized that the realization of these principles
requires the active engagement of all ASEAN Member States (AMS), sectoral bodies
under the three (3) pillars of ASEAN, and stakeholders including civil society,
academia, media, and private sectors. Further, the AEC Blueprint 2025 stated that
promotion of entrepreneurship and social capital development by creating a more
conducive environment for entrepreneurship. Some of the ways to realize this is
through the ASEAN Online Academy and enhancing social capital development for
MSMEs, with particular focus on youth and women, are among its priorities (ASEAN
Secretariat, 2015).
Focusing on women, Amartya Sen (2001), on his essay entitled “The Many
Faces of Gender Inequality”, has identified seven (7) varieties of disparities between
genders, namely (1) mortality inequality, (2) natality inequality, (3) basic-facility
inequality, (4) special-opportunity inequality, (5) professional inequality, (6)
ownership inequality, and (7) household inequality. Mortality inequality directly
tackles life and death with women being observed to have high mortality rates than
men on communities with documented gender-biased as compared to communities
with little or no gender bias. Natality inequality is the preference for boys over girls,
which is a characteristic of patriarchal societies. Basic-facility inequality, as the name
suggests, are biases that involved basic needs such as equal opportunity to attend
school and social functions. Special-opportunity inequality covers privileges such as
access to higher education, training, and professional work, among others.
Professional inequality is those inequalities which pertain to promotion in work and
occupation. Ownership inequality relates to biases in property ownership, which was
identified to affect not only the voice of women in the society but also makes it harder
for women to enter and to flourish in commercial, economic, and even in some social
functions. Household inequality directly tackles the unequal distribution of household
roles and responsibilities, which in some societies, is to take for granted that men will
naturally work outside the home. In contrast, women could do so if and only if they
could combine such work with various inescapable and unequally shared household
duties.
Given the above scenarios, this study explored the business environment for
Filipino women involved in the micro, small and medium enterprises. It drew a
comparison with select ASEAN countries, namely Singapore and Myanmar, using
the available published resources.
Description
Masters Thesis
Keywords
Research Subject Categories::SOCIAL SCIENCES::Business and economics::Business studies,
Research Subject Categories::INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH AREAS::Gender studies