Publication:
Untapped Potential: Household Enterprises in Tanzania

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Date
2018-06
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Published
2018-06
Author(s)
Sánchez Puerta, María Laura
Granata, María Julia
Becerril, Odette Maciel
Heaner, Gwendolyn
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Abstract
The World Bank in collaboration with the Tanzania Social Action Fund (TASAF) conducted an assessment on the constraints and opportunities faced by non-farm household enterprise owners when starting and growing a business. The report highlights the findings from two applied methodologies namely a qualitative toolkit and a quantitative analysis. The toolkit included several qualitative techniques like focus groups, life stories, key informant interviews, and a community mapping exercise administered to 385 individuals from eight communities, among whom about a third were beneficiaries of the countrywide TASASF III - Productive Social Safety Net (PSSN) program. The quantitative data had rich information on 7,400 Tanzanian households and included a specific section on household enterprises. The authors found that the major constraints household enterprise owners face when starting or growing a business are lack of access to financial resources, weak markets and high competition among themselves, and lack of skills. Participants also identified severe weather conditions (droughts and rainy season) as a risk for their businesses and their communities. The report concludes with recommendation for TASAF and the Tanzanian government as they move forward towards the next phase of the PSSN program.
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Sánchez Puerta, María Laura; Granata, María Julia; Becerril, Odette Maciel; Heaner, Gwendolyn; Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan. 2018. Untapped Potential: Household Enterprises in Tanzania. Jobs Working Paper;No. 15. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30038 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.
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