Several demand and supply sided constraints impede the potential of women entrepreneurs in developing countries to scale up their businesses. Digital financial technologies and policies have demonstrated proven ability to impact women entrepreneurship positively via increasing their knowledge of legal and regulatory provisions, facilitating access to finance, training, skills, information, and new markets. This pilot study considers how to leverage digital financial technology in e-commerce platforms to understand the extent of improvement in access to market, credit and insurance in Ghana. This study will train 60 female entrepreneurs in the Greater Accra region over a month and compare specific business outcomes with a control group. The treatment will entail supporting the selected female entrepreneurs to (i) register their businesses electronically (ii) adopt a simplified e-transaction recording system for recording purchases, sales, and other cost to track business performance; (iii) use digital financial services to accept payments, save, access e-credit and purchase insurance.
This study will train 60 female entrepreneurs in the Greater Accra region over a month and compare specific business outcomes with a control group. The treatment will entail supporting the selected female entrepreneurs to (i) register their businesses electronically (ii) adopt a simplified e-transaction recording system for recording purchases, sales, and other cost to track business performance; (iii) use digital financial services to accept payments, save, access e-credit and purchase insurance.
The outcome of this short-term study will establish the potential impact of digital finance in helping women entrepreneurs in Ghana’s informal sector to circumvent the challenges limiting the growth of their businesses. The results will enable the research team to upack the relevant elements sine qua non to the viability of the long-term project proposal implementation
- Simon Bawakyillenuo
- Michael Kodom
- Peter Quartey
- Agyapomaa Gyeke-Dako
- Andrew Agyei-Holmes
- Cynthia Akwei