Thursday, 12 December, 2002, 16:17 GMT -BBC
Africans more likely to be entrepreneurs
Africans, or people of African descent, living in Western countries are
five times more likely to start their own businesses than their white
counterparts, new statistics show.
The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor also found that Asian immigrants in
Western countries were twice as likely as white people to be
entrepreneurs.
And people from the Caribbean were three times as likely to start their
own firms.
The figures suggest that these communities are playing a far more
important role than had been thought.
Leading the way
Nearly half a million people across 37 countries were interviewed for
the study.
GEM Definition of entrepreneurship
Any attempt at new business or new venture creation, such as
self-employment, a new business organisation, or the expansion of an
existing business by an individual, teams of individuals, or established
businesses
Rebecca Harding, chief economist at the Work Foundation which sponsored
the report, said fear of failure seemed to be key to a community's
attitude to entrepreneurship.
"These ethnic non-white communities are actually far more resilient to
the fear of failure," she said.
"In fact, if they do fear failure they'll still go ahead and set up
businesses anyway."
Raising finance
There has been criticism of the support frameworks for black businesses.
In Britain, for example, the banking system has been accused of being
inadequate in its support of black businesses.
A report commissioned by the British Bankers' Association in September
said it was more difficult for black entrepreneurs to raise start-up
finance from banks than their white or Asian counterparts.
The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor found 97% of financing for ethnic
communities came from personal or family sources.
And ethnic companies create nine more jobs, on average, per start-up
than white businesses.
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