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African micro industry case study.doc
African Studies Quarterly
Home | Current Issue | Previous Issues | Submission Guidelines | Books for Review

Volume 8, Issue 4
Summer 2006

Causes of Small Business Failure in Uganda: A Case Study from Bushenyi and Mbarara Towns[1]
Charles Tushabomwe-Kazooba

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Abstract: The privatization drive and the Civil and Public Service reforms that began in the early 1990s in Uganda laid a foundation for an increased number of small business enterprises. By 2002, small scale enterprises were employing approximately 2,000,000, and serving about 6,000,000 people at business and household level. The entrepreneurs that set up these enterprises lacked business management skills and capital, and as such, many of them faced a number of problems, most of which were of a startup nature. A survey was carried out to establish the causes of small business failures in Uganda using businesses in Mbarara and Bushenyi towns as case studies. In-depth interviews and questionnaire methods were mainly used to collect data from 133 small business enterprises. It is concluded that the causes of small businesses failure are multidimensional and diverse. They include poor management as well as political, economic, social, cultural and environmental factors. In practice, many of these are interrelated. The survey revealed that the startup factors posed a greater threat than those that are encountered once the business has been established. As such, business people who successfully negotiate the initial startup hurdles have greater chances of future success in their businesses. Despite the solutions sought over the years, the business community in Uganda is still hampered by the challenges. The study concludes by making a number of practical suggestions against business failure.

INTRODUCTION

The privatization drive, which started in the early 1990s, made the Government of Uganda relinquish its position as the number one



References: Arden, P. (2003). It 's not how good you are, It 's how good you want to be. Italy, Phaidon Press Limited. Biryabarema, E. (1998). Small Scale Business and Commercial Banks in Uganda. Kampala, Makerere University Press. "Facts about Small Business and the U.S. Small Business Administration." Washington , D.C: Small Business Administration, 1979. P.7. Also November 1980, pp. 3-4. Hodgetts, M. R. and D. F. Kuratko (1986). Effective Small Business Management, 2nd Edition. Orlando, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Keough, J. "Tips for Surviving an Economic Slowdown for Small Businesses". Systems Support Inc. DRJ 's Small Business Center, 2002. http://www.drj.com/special/smallbusiness/ Mbaguta, H Mwanje, R. (2003), "Power costs high for Rural Businesses". In The Monitor, 7th October. Republic of Uganda (1999). Draft Policy Paper on Micro and Small Enterprise Development. Kampala: Private Sector Development/Micro and Small Enterprise Policy Unit, Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development. Small Business Act (1953). Snyder, M. (2000). Women in African Economies, From Burning Sun to Boardroom. Kampala, Fountain Publishers. Uganda Bureau of Statistics (2003). A Report on the Uganda Business Register, 2001 / 2002, Entebbe , Uganda Government Printers. Uganda Bureau of Statistics (2004). Statistical Abstract, Entebbe , Uganda Government Printers. Wavamunno, K. B. G. (2000). The story of an African Entrepreneur, Kampala, Wavah Books Ltd. United Nations Statistics Division (2004). Millennium Indicators.

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