Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs

Entrepreneurship can be a pathway to employment and economic empowerment for women. Over half of the women in developing countries are or aspire to be entrepreneurs, but most of them run subsistence oriented micro-businesses that are not seen as key drivers of innovation and growth. Among formal firms, the share of women-led businesses decreases as the size of the firm increases. Multiple factors—including lack of skills, networks, and access to finance, technology, and markets—constrain women’s decision to become entrepreneurs and affect their choices concerning which sector to enter, how much to put into their firms, and which business practices and technology to adopt. Contextual factors, such as social norms, access to childcare, and risk of gender-based violence, also contribute to the gender gap in firm performance documented by the Africa GIL3 and the EAP GIL. The GIL Federation is generating rigorous evidence around the world to understand what works, and what does not, in addressing the differential constraints restricting the growth of women-led firms. This note presents evidence on five key findings.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Halim, Daniel, Ubfal, Diego, Wangchuk, Rigzom
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-02-14T21:15:08Z
Subjects:WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS, SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS, EDUCATION, INNOVATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099533401252340173/IDU073d63b3f0875d04f1f0af210493287698a4f
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/39427
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spelling dig-okr-10986394272023-04-27T17:04:59Z Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs Halim, Daniel Ubfal, Diego Wangchuk, Rigzom WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS EDUCATION INNOVATION Entrepreneurship can be a pathway to employment and economic empowerment for women. Over half of the women in developing countries are or aspire to be entrepreneurs, but most of them run subsistence oriented micro-businesses that are not seen as key drivers of innovation and growth. Among formal firms, the share of women-led businesses decreases as the size of the firm increases. Multiple factors—including lack of skills, networks, and access to finance, technology, and markets—constrain women’s decision to become entrepreneurs and affect their choices concerning which sector to enter, how much to put into their firms, and which business practices and technology to adopt. Contextual factors, such as social norms, access to childcare, and risk of gender-based violence, also contribute to the gender gap in firm performance documented by the Africa GIL3 and the EAP GIL. The GIL Federation is generating rigorous evidence around the world to understand what works, and what does not, in addressing the differential constraints restricting the growth of women-led firms. This note presents evidence on five key findings. 2023-02-14T21:15:08Z 2023-03-06T15:59:09Z 2023-02-14T21:15:08Z 2023-03-06T15:59:09Z 2023-01-25 Brief Fiche Resumen http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099533401252340173/IDU073d63b3f0875d04f1f0af210493287698a4f http://hdl.handle.net/10986/39427 English en_US Gender Innovation Lab Federation Evidence Series;No.3 CC BY 3.0 IGO World Bank http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo 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 WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
EDUCATION
INNOVATION
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
EDUCATION
INNOVATION
spellingShingle WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
EDUCATION
INNOVATION
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
EDUCATION
INNOVATION
Halim, Daniel
Ubfal, Diego
Wangchuk, Rigzom
Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
description Entrepreneurship can be a pathway to employment and economic empowerment for women. Over half of the women in developing countries are or aspire to be entrepreneurs, but most of them run subsistence oriented micro-businesses that are not seen as key drivers of innovation and growth. Among formal firms, the share of women-led businesses decreases as the size of the firm increases. Multiple factors—including lack of skills, networks, and access to finance, technology, and markets—constrain women’s decision to become entrepreneurs and affect their choices concerning which sector to enter, how much to put into their firms, and which business practices and technology to adopt. Contextual factors, such as social norms, access to childcare, and risk of gender-based violence, also contribute to the gender gap in firm performance documented by the Africa GIL3 and the EAP GIL. The GIL Federation is generating rigorous evidence around the world to understand what works, and what does not, in addressing the differential constraints restricting the growth of women-led firms. This note presents evidence on five key findings.
format Brief
topic_facet WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
EDUCATION
INNOVATION
author Halim, Daniel
Ubfal, Diego
Wangchuk, Rigzom
author_facet Halim, Daniel
Ubfal, Diego
Wangchuk, Rigzom
author_sort Halim, Daniel
title Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
title_short Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
title_full Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
title_fullStr Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
title_full_unstemmed Policy Lessons on Supporting Women Entrepreneurs
title_sort policy lessons on supporting women entrepreneurs
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2023-02-14T21:15:08Z
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099533401252340173/IDU073d63b3f0875d04f1f0af210493287698a4f
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/39427
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