Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services

The global rate of informal firms is high, especially for those that are women-owned and in the poorest countries, despite 149 economies implementing 368 reforms to simplify the registration process in a recent ten-year period. Through an experiment in Malawi, the author established an effective and replicable design to offer informal firms support to formalize, costing much less than the typical private sector development intervention. What works in the short-term is combining business registration with an information session at a bank including the offer of a business bank account. This led to women entrepreneurs increasing usage of bank accounts for business-only purposes, financial record keeping, and access to other financial services including insurance. Informal firms are smaller and less productive than formal ones, and their informal status is often associated with a number of costs, including less access to finance. Although 75 percent of the countries included in the Doing Business project have adopted at least one reform making it easier to register a business since 2004, informality remains very prevalent, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This may lead many to believe that entrepreneurs are not interested in registering their firms, and that if they could only be convinced to formalize it would lead to great benefits for their business.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Campos, Francisco, Goldstein, Markus, McKenzie, David
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-03
Subjects:ACCOUNT, ACCOUNTS, BUSINESS REGISTRATION, BUSINESSES, CERTIFICATE, CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, COMPETITIVENESS, EMPOWERMENT, FEMALE, FINANCIAL SERVICES, GENDER, GENDER EQUALITY, GENDER INEQUALITY, HARASSMENT, INNOVATION, INSURANCE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCTIVITY, RESULT, RESULTS, SEX, TRANSACTION, WILL, WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, AFRICA GENDER POLICY, GENDER INNOVATION LAB,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/120701468263713677/Making-it-easier-for-women-in-Malawi-to-formalize-their-firms-and-access-financial-services
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25454
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spelling dig-okr-10986254542024-08-08T13:27:02Z Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services Campos, Francisco Goldstein, Markus McKenzie, David ACCOUNT ACCOUNTS BUSINESS REGISTRATION BUSINESSES CERTIFICATE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE COMPETITIVENESS EMPOWERMENT FEMALE FINANCIAL SERVICES GENDER GENDER EQUALITY GENDER INEQUALITY HARASSMENT INNOVATION INSURANCE PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVITY RESULT RESULTS SEX TRANSACTION WILL WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT AFRICA GENDER POLICY GENDER INNOVATION LAB The global rate of informal firms is high, especially for those that are women-owned and in the poorest countries, despite 149 economies implementing 368 reforms to simplify the registration process in a recent ten-year period. Through an experiment in Malawi, the author established an effective and replicable design to offer informal firms support to formalize, costing much less than the typical private sector development intervention. What works in the short-term is combining business registration with an information session at a bank including the offer of a business bank account. This led to women entrepreneurs increasing usage of bank accounts for business-only purposes, financial record keeping, and access to other financial services including insurance. Informal firms are smaller and less productive than formal ones, and their informal status is often associated with a number of costs, including less access to finance. Although 75 percent of the countries included in the Doing Business project have adopted at least one reform making it easier to register a business since 2004, informality remains very prevalent, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This may lead many to believe that entrepreneurs are not interested in registering their firms, and that if they could only be convinced to formalize it would lead to great benefits for their business. 2016-11-28T20:21:40Z 2016-11-28T20:21:40Z 2015-03 Brief Fiche Resumen http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/120701468263713677/Making-it-easier-for-women-in-Malawi-to-formalize-their-firms-and-access-financial-services https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25454 English en_US Gender Innovation Lab Policy Brief;No. 10 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNT
ACCOUNTS
BUSINESS REGISTRATION
BUSINESSES
CERTIFICATE
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
EMPOWERMENT
FEMALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GENDER
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
HARASSMENT
INNOVATION
INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
RESULT
RESULTS
SEX
TRANSACTION
WILL
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
ACCOUNT
ACCOUNTS
BUSINESS REGISTRATION
BUSINESSES
CERTIFICATE
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
EMPOWERMENT
FEMALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GENDER
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
HARASSMENT
INNOVATION
INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
RESULT
RESULTS
SEX
TRANSACTION
WILL
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
spellingShingle ACCOUNT
ACCOUNTS
BUSINESS REGISTRATION
BUSINESSES
CERTIFICATE
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
EMPOWERMENT
FEMALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GENDER
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
HARASSMENT
INNOVATION
INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
RESULT
RESULTS
SEX
TRANSACTION
WILL
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
ACCOUNT
ACCOUNTS
BUSINESS REGISTRATION
BUSINESSES
CERTIFICATE
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
EMPOWERMENT
FEMALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GENDER
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
HARASSMENT
INNOVATION
INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
RESULT
RESULTS
SEX
TRANSACTION
WILL
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
Campos, Francisco
Goldstein, Markus
McKenzie, David
Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
description The global rate of informal firms is high, especially for those that are women-owned and in the poorest countries, despite 149 economies implementing 368 reforms to simplify the registration process in a recent ten-year period. Through an experiment in Malawi, the author established an effective and replicable design to offer informal firms support to formalize, costing much less than the typical private sector development intervention. What works in the short-term is combining business registration with an information session at a bank including the offer of a business bank account. This led to women entrepreneurs increasing usage of bank accounts for business-only purposes, financial record keeping, and access to other financial services including insurance. Informal firms are smaller and less productive than formal ones, and their informal status is often associated with a number of costs, including less access to finance. Although 75 percent of the countries included in the Doing Business project have adopted at least one reform making it easier to register a business since 2004, informality remains very prevalent, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This may lead many to believe that entrepreneurs are not interested in registering their firms, and that if they could only be convinced to formalize it would lead to great benefits for their business.
format Brief
topic_facet ACCOUNT
ACCOUNTS
BUSINESS REGISTRATION
BUSINESSES
CERTIFICATE
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
EMPOWERMENT
FEMALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GENDER
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
HARASSMENT
INNOVATION
INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
RESULT
RESULTS
SEX
TRANSACTION
WILL
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
author Campos, Francisco
Goldstein, Markus
McKenzie, David
author_facet Campos, Francisco
Goldstein, Markus
McKenzie, David
author_sort Campos, Francisco
title Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
title_short Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
title_full Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
title_fullStr Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
title_full_unstemmed Making it Easier for Women in Malawi to Formalize Their Firms and Access Financial Services
title_sort making it easier for women in malawi to formalize their firms and access financial services
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2015-03
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/120701468263713677/Making-it-easier-for-women-in-Malawi-to-formalize-their-firms-and-access-financial-services
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25454
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