A CASE STUDY OF IDUMOTA MARKET IN
LAGOS ISLAND
ABSTRACT
Entrepreneurial
development is a major factor towards ensuring that a country experience growth
in terms of employment and self-dependability. Entrepreneurial development has
also led to employment generation, growth of the economy and sustainable
development. Entrepreneurship is supposed to be a bail out for economic
stagnation with reference to creating job opportunities, this is , combating
unemployment in an economy .Objective of this study is to know whether or not
entrepreneurial development is truly a strategic tool towards enhancing Nigeria
economy and also how it has affected the economic growth using idumota Market
in lagos as a case study.
The
use of drafted questionnaire was used to testing hypothesis and discussion of
findings .For dis study 70(100%) questionnaire was distributed, but was able to
retrieve 65 (93%). Which is still valid.
CHAPTER ONE
1.1. BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
Over
the years, it has being proven from other research work and in developed
countries that Entrepreneurial development is a major factor toward ensuring
that a country experience growth in terms of employment and self-dependability.
Economic displacement is one of the external forces that influence the
development of entrepreneurship (kuratko, 2009). This is why Alam and Hossan
(2003) see entrepreneurship as playing a key role in the process of economic
development through creation of employment, increasing investment and
consumption in a nation. In similar vein, Chigunta (2001) notes that
entrepreneurship has been receiving increasing recognition as a source of job
creation, empowerment for the unemployed and economic dynamism in a rapidly
globalizing world. Also in the word of Garavan and O'Cinneide (1994) in their
contributions maintain that entrepreneurship is often used for developing
enterprising people and inculcating an attitude of self-reliance using
appropriate learning processes. In Nigeria before the advent of colonial
government, unemployment was a rare phenomenon because the people were highly
entrepreneurial and productively engaged in subsistence jobs and farming. This
entrepreneurial engagement is prevalent in Yoruba land of western Nigeria,
Hausa land of the northern Nigeria, and among the Igbo people of eastern Nigeria.
It
is on record that Yoruba and Hausa ethnic groups are great entrepreneurs in pre
and post independent Nigeria. The Igbo ethnic group particularly is recognized
internationally for its 12
culture
of entrepreneurship and enterprise development (Dana, 1995). This is why
Ananaba (1969) asserts:
“The
economy of the various states which make-up modern Nigeria was basically a
subsistence economy and customs had established the practice that people serve
their parents, village heads and the community without remuneration. On a given
day, people went and work for a particular individual1. Through economy the
higher would be the poverty level and associated welfare challenges.
Entrepreneurial
development has also led to employment generation, growth of the economy and
sustainable development. The current number of colleges and universities
offering small business management and entrepreneurship development programme
has grown from one university in 1947 to over 1600 in the 1990s (Solomon and
Fernald, 1991; Solomon et al, 1994; Solomon, et al, 2002).
White
and Kenyon (2000) also found a „flourishing youth enterprise culture‟ in the
United Kingdom among young entrepreneurs aged 18-24 years. In Zambia, it was
show that 25% of the youth are self-employed (Chigunta, 2001). Most of these
young people, especially younger youth, tend to be concentrated in marginal
trading and service activities. Findings in Ghana of small scale enterprises
reveal that young people owned almost 40 percent of the enterprises (Osei, Baah-Nuakoh,
Tutu, and Sowa,1993).
Similarly,
research in South Africa suggests that the probability of self-employment among
young people rises with age (Chigunta, 2001). When Nigerians especially
unemployed youth are mentored and provided the needed resources and enabling
environment for business start-ups, they will economically be engaged thereby
shunning the illegal acts of hostage-taking, kidnapping, bombing and vandalism
and homelessness.
According
to Groves (1997), in Nickels, McHugh, and McHugh (1999), job-creating power of
entrepreneurs can be worked at of some great American entrepreneurs from Du
Point in 1802 to Avon in 1886 and Bill Gates to Ted Turners in the recent times
and also in Nigeria we have the likes of Alico Dangote, Mike Adenuga, Jimoh
Ibrahim etc who have stood out over the years as a result of entrepreneurial
spirit in them as they started small but today they are people that everyone
wants to reckon with and not just in Nigeria but all over the world.
Small
and Medium Scale Enterprises often owned by entrepreneurs are sub-sectors of
the industrial sector which play crucial roles in industrial development (Ahmed
2006). Also, following the adoption of Economic reform programme in Nigeria in
1981, there have been several decisions to switch from capital intensive and
large scale industrial projects which was based on the philosophy of import
development to Small and Medium Scale Enterprises which have better prospects
for developing domestic economy, thereby generating the required goods and
services that will propel the economy of Nigeria towards development.
It
is based on this premise that Ojo (2009), argued that one of the responses to
the challenges of development in developing countries particularly, in Nigeria,
is the encouragement of entrepreneurial development scheme. Despite the
abundant natural resources, the country still finds it very difficult to
discover her developmental bearing since independence. Quality and adequate
infrastructural provision has remained a night-mare, the real sector among
others have witnessed downward performance while unemployment rate is on the
increase. Most of the poor and unemployed Nigerians in order to better their
lots have resorted to the establishment of their own businesses. Consequently,
Entrepreneurship is fast becoming a household name in Nigeria.
This
is as a result of the fact that the so called white collar jobs that people
clamors for are no longer there. Even, the touted sectors (Banks and companies)
known to be the largest employer
of
labour are on the down-turn following the consolidation crisis and fraudulent
practices of the high and mighty in the banking sector which saw to it that
banks like Oceanic, Intercontinental, Fin-bank cease to exist.
Since
the office jobs that people desire are no longer there for the teeming
population, and the few ones that succeeded in getting the jobs are thrown out
as a result of the factors identified above, the need for the government and
the people to have a rethink on the way-out of this mess became imperative.
Hence, the need for Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) became a reality
as a means of ensuring self-independent, employment creation, import
substitution, effective and efficient utilization of local raw materials, reducing
rural urban migration and contribution to the economic development of our dear
nation (Nigeria).
According
to Emmanuel, Oni and Daniya (2012) benefits of Small and Medium Scale
Enterprises cannot be achieved without the direct intervention of the government
and financial institutions and this is why over the years a number of policies
have been formulated by the government with a view to developing Small and
Medium Scale Enterprises. For example, the Nigerian government under the then
leadership of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo promulgated micro-finance policy and
other regulatory and supervisory frame work in 2005 and this was done in order
to see to it that small and medium scale business enterprise strive.
1.2.
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
Entrepreneurship
is supposed to be a bail out for economic stagnation with reference to creating
job opportunities that is, combating unemployment in an economy. But Nigeria as
a country is still faced with increasing unemployment rate in the sense that
most of its graduate are without job and this propel the researcher to find out
what the challenge is despite the effort of the government towards ensuring
that hiding skills are discovered.
In
view of the above problem, this study is intended to critically appraise and
analyse the operating environment and circumstances of SMEs in Nigeria with a
view to actually identifying why they (SMEs) are not playing the vibrant and
vital roles in the Nigerian economy as they (SMEs) does in other economies such
as USA, India, South Africa which has so many similarities with Nigeria in
terms of population and other demographic variables.
1.3.
OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
1.3.1.
GENERAL OBJECTIVE
To
know whether or not entrepreneurial development is truly a strategic tool
towards enhancing Nigeria economy and also how it has affected the economic
growth using Idumota Market in Lagos as case study.
TOPIC: ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT; ITS BENEFITS IN A DEVELOPING ECONOMY
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 78
Price: 3000 NGN
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