Title

Informal entrepreneurship and women's empowerment – the case of street vendors in urban Colombia

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1108/IJGE-04-2021-0068

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-4-2022

Publication Title

International Journal of Gender and Entrepreneurship

Abstract

Purpose: International development organizations promote access to resources through self-employment as one of the main strategies to achieve women's empowerment. However, many self-employees are more similar to informal workers than to successful entrepreneurs affecting women's control over resources and their empowerment process. This article analyzes the relationship between informal entrepreneurship and female empowerment in the context of an emerging economy. Design/methodology/approach: The authors surveyed a sample of 295 female street vendors in Bogotá – Colombia. Contingency and correlational analysis is performed. Findings: Evidence is found about the expansion of women's capacity to make decisions about resource allocation and time managing because of informal entrepreneurship. Nevertheless, these decisions are not strategic nor given in a context with several options. Several structural constraints to the exercise of agency limit empowerment to an individual process dependent on circumstances instead of a collective process resulting in changes in women's social conditions. Research limitations/implications: This research allows for a better understanding of the potentialities and opportunities these entrepreneurships offer to women and what strategies could be implemented to take advantage of them. Practical implications: Despite their characteristics, informal entrepreneurship has potentialities to improve female empowerment especially when factors beyond economic rationality, such as personal, familial and sociocultural, are considered. Originality/value: The authors discuss the category of informal entrepreneurship in emerging economies and evaluate the success of this type of entrepreneurship with a gender point of view by incorporating empowerment as measure.

Volume

14

Issue

2

First Page

188

Last Page

212

ISSN

17566266

Identifier

85118158422 (Scopus)

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