TY - JOUR
T1 - Operating in quicksand: dark sides of informal entrepreneurship in extreme poverty contexts
AU - Ciambotti, Giacomo
AU - Cau, Flavia
AU - Sottini, Andrea Carlo Maria
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Literature on informal economy largely debated on the positive role of informal entrepreneurs toward poverty alleviation in developing countries. However, such contexts are characterized by extreme poverty conditions with institutional voids and resource constraints that affect the entrepreneurial operations. While scholars documented why informality persists in developing countries, and what lead informal entrepreneurs to avoid the transition to formal economy, we currently miss the mechanisms by which informal entrepreneurs can effectively operate in contexts of extreme poverty. Our paper addresses this gap through a qualitative research based on 58 informal entrepreneurs in Uganda and Ghana. We discovered that informal entrepreneurs operate through practices of embeddedness in community to get necessary resources and creating informal institutions to fill institutional voids. However, such entrepreneurial practices generate also dark side effects, which also reinforce each other in a cross-bracing mechanism. We then theorized such dynamic of a cross-braced interplay between community embeddedness and informal institutions revealing how informal entrepreneurs are trapped in operating in a ‘quicksand’, which is the main cause of persistence in poverty condition. With our paper, we contribute to the literature on informal entrepreneurship in extreme-poor contexts, and especially we extend literature on the entrepreneurial processes which lead entrepreneurs to persist in informality. Future research and limitations are offered as well.
AB - Literature on informal economy largely debated on the positive role of informal entrepreneurs toward poverty alleviation in developing countries. However, such contexts are characterized by extreme poverty conditions with institutional voids and resource constraints that affect the entrepreneurial operations. While scholars documented why informality persists in developing countries, and what lead informal entrepreneurs to avoid the transition to formal economy, we currently miss the mechanisms by which informal entrepreneurs can effectively operate in contexts of extreme poverty. Our paper addresses this gap through a qualitative research based on 58 informal entrepreneurs in Uganda and Ghana. We discovered that informal entrepreneurs operate through practices of embeddedness in community to get necessary resources and creating informal institutions to fill institutional voids. However, such entrepreneurial practices generate also dark side effects, which also reinforce each other in a cross-bracing mechanism. We then theorized such dynamic of a cross-braced interplay between community embeddedness and informal institutions revealing how informal entrepreneurs are trapped in operating in a ‘quicksand’, which is the main cause of persistence in poverty condition. With our paper, we contribute to the literature on informal entrepreneurship in extreme-poor contexts, and especially we extend literature on the entrepreneurial processes which lead entrepreneurs to persist in informality. Future research and limitations are offered as well.
KW - Africa
KW - Informal economy
KW - entrepreneurship
KW - Africa
KW - Informal economy
KW - entrepreneurship
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/236534
UR - https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/ambpp.2021.13011abstract
U2 - 10.5465/AMBPP.2021.13011abstract
DO - 10.5465/AMBPP.2021.13011abstract
M3 - Conference article
SN - 2151-6561
VL - 2021
SP - 13011-N/A
JO - ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT ANNUAL MEETING PROCEEDINGS
JF - ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT ANNUAL MEETING PROCEEDINGS
T2 - Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management
Y2 - 29 July 2021 through 4 August 2021
ER -