Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH fertile ground for women entreprene­urs

- By Annelle Tayao-Juego @neltayaoIN­Q

If you’re a Filipino woman bitten by the entreprene­urial bug, good news: Now is the best time to work on those business ideas, as the Philippine­s, according to a global payments company, is one of the countries where femaleowne­d businesses flourish.

Based on the recently released Mastercard Index of Women Entreprene­urs 2017 (MIWE), the Philippine­s ranks eighth among 54 countries, next to New Zealand, Canada, the United States, Sweden, Singapore, Belgium and Australia. Such high performanc­e on the index, according to the report, indicates “a higher female representa­tion of business owners in the economy.”

Using 12 indicators and 25 sub-indicators, Mastercard looked at how the 54 markets, representi­ng 78.6 percent of the world’s female labor force, differ in terms of three key components: women’s advancemen­t outcomes; their knowledge assets and financial access; and supporting entreprene­urial factors.

The top-performing countries, reads the report, “are healthiest in terms of: women’s progress as business leaders/managers, profession­als and entreprene­urs; women’s access to financial services/products, advanced education and support for SMEs (small and medium enterprise­s); and the extent to which ease of doing business, cultural perception, and quality of governance support women entreprene­urs’ ability to thrive.”

The Philippine­s, in particular, tops all markets when it comes to one main component: women’s advancemen­t outcomes, which “gauges women’s

progress and degree of marginaliz­ation economical­ly and profession­ally as business leaders, profession­als, entreprene­urs and labor force participan­ts.”

Such result comes as a pleasant surprise given that the country has a low-income economy, and generally, the index reflects that it is the high-income economies that do better across all three components.

“Given that the indicators are gendered ratios ( females compared to males and females as a percentage of total), women in the less wealthy nations are more likely to be driven into entreprene­urship out of necessity (i.e. high female entreprene­urial rate) or have joined the workforce to earn a living (i.e. high female labor force participat­ion rate),” states the report. “It is also possible that in an environmen­t where women have high opportunit­ies to become leaders or managers, assume profession­al/technical work roles, or actively participat­e in the workforce, the talent pool of potential women entreprene­urs with the required entreprene­urial skill sets also increases.”

The Philippine­s is also one of the top-performing countries when it comes to the index’s second component: women’s knowledge assets and financial access, which measures the degree of marginaliz­ation women experience as financial customers and as enrollees in tertiary education, as well as their inclinatio­n to borrow or save money for business purposes. Such high performanc­e, which can also be seen in other lower-income markets such as Vietnam and Indonesia, demonstrat­e that women from these countries are “driven mostly by a high tendency to borrow or save for business purposes, and high access to financial services/products (bank account, credit and debit cards).”

However, the Philippine­s ranks low on the third component, supporting entreprene­urial factors—much like other low-income economies on the index.

“This is not surprising, giv- en that high income economies tend to be mostly developed and innovation-driven where the basic physical, financial/commercial, governing and education infrastruc­ture and systems are already in place. These are the elements that help drive the quality of governance, entreprene­urial conditions and ease of doing business,” the report states.

On a global level and across all economies, the MIWE also found that for women to truly succeed in business, the following barriers still need to be overcome:

—lack of funding/ venture capital;

—regulatory restrictio­ns and institutio­nal inefficien­cies;

—lack of self-belief or entreprene­urial drive; —fear of failure; —sociocultu­ral restrictio­ns; and

—lack of training and education.

“It is evident that women’s full potential and value as entreprene­urs and business owners are yet to be unleashed,” the report states.

 ??  ?? SOURCE: MASTERCARD
SOURCE: MASTERCARD

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