Finance and entrepreneurship in the small-business sector in Indonesia
Abstract
This dissertation attempts to describe and explain the ways in
which small businesses . in Indonesia finance their initial
establishment and subsequent expansion, and to evaluate the
Government's policies relevant to small businesses - particularly
those relating to financial aspects. Since the small-business sector
is quantitatively very significant, and since little research has been
done on the financing of small firms, the study should be useful in
helping to formulate future policies and in evaluating current ones.
The main data base for the study consists of records of
interviews with 114 firms and six commercial banks in Yogyakarta.
These interviews were carried out by the author in 1978.
Particular attention is given to the popular notion that
capital markets are imperfect in less-developed countries, and that
this imperfection impinges on small firms in such a way as to
constrain their growth. It is argued here that such views are based
on superficial and subjective observations of these markets, that
there is no substantive evidence to show that they are imperfect, and
that small firms' alleged lack of access to finance is greatly
exaggerated.
The evidence presented in this study suggests that finance is
best seen as just one of many problems faced by business owners.
Accordingly, it is not access to finance (or lack of it) which is the
primary determinant of firms' growth performance, but the
entrepreneurial ability of their owners. The Indonesian Government uses the formal finance sector quite
extensively as an instrument of economic policy. The most important
aspect is the simultaneous subsidisation of State bank lending and
control of the interest rates at which this is undertaken. It is
argued here that interest rate control works counter to the objectives
of the subsidies. This applies to lending policy in general and also
to the particular programme which aims to provide greater access to
low-cost funds to small pribumi businessmen.
Despite the Government's announced intention to promote small
pribumi firms, much could be done in several areas by way of changes
to other policies which conflict with this objective. Not the least
of these would be to discontinue the practice of providing a wide
range of explicit and implicit subsidies to large firms.
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