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When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters /

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Page 1: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

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When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market?

Dr Julia Rouse

Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network

Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Page 2: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

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Projects: My Journey• Personal background• Longitudinal studies of:

– Youth enterprise programme– New Entrepreneur Scholarship programme– Entrepreneur maternity

• Recently with Oxfam and other stakeholders:– ‘Empowering British Bangladeshi Women Through

Small Enterprise’– Beginning to explore Universal Credits…..

Page 3: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Business Planning Under Enterprise Programmes: A New Me!

• Empowerment by writing oneself into a new opportunityRaises aspirations and confidenceProvides new statusDevelops some skillsLegitimation of new identity by authoritative figures

in enterprise programmes

Page 4: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

And then?• Business launch – using start-up funds to ‘be’ a new

you!

• Business trading – often more tricky because markets are different to what we imagine and competitive……..

Follow-on support is rare• Enterprise programmes may not have to report outcomes…• Outcome evidence is scarce and may be unreliable

Page 5: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

So what happens? Youth Enterprise:• Trading! but:

• Poor business ideas, poor markets• Childcare and maternity barriers• Inadequate business skills, networks and funding

• Dangers:• Debt• Mental health / family problems• Persevering in a ‘no;low hope’ business• Informal trading

Page 6: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Youth Enterprise: Left Holding the Baby!• Childcare invisible in business plans

– Complex private childcare plansorganising and transporting between multiple carersshift parentingpart-time trading, flexible hourstrade/care simultaneously

• Business trading: collapse of childcare strategies– Withdrawal of informal support; risky coping strategies– Business failure

Page 7: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Also: Pregnancy!

My motivation to research entrepreneur pregnancy

Raises questions about:Family planning RegulationsMarket behaviourCoping strategies

Page 8: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Individualised Nature of Business Struggle/Failure• “Must be me”

– “I am a failure”– “All I need to do is learn and start again”

• May be true in some instances, but resources are now more constrained….

• Commissioners are unaware and unaccountable• Individualised: no empowerment via collective action

Page 9: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

New Entrepreneur Scholarship Programme• Under-capitalisation (median £5,825 v. UK £15k)

Despite £3,500 grant Low reliance on personal savings and banksHigh dependence on family/friend loans and credit

cards• Particularly for economically inactive and poorly

educated (= class?)– But no gender difference

Page 10: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

NES: Effect on businesses

• Second wave evaluation (average 29 months old):

Median turnover £18k; median drawings £3600.

Trade without premises, partner or sub-contractors.

Page 11: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Are These National Patterns?

• Probably, Yes! – Class and – particularly - gender affect life course

pathways to business start-up– Entrepreneur earnings are higher if:

• There is personal and friends/family money to invest.• Long hours are possible due to freedom from housework

and childcare.

Page 12: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Should We Abandon ‘Enterprise Inclusion’ Policy?• Rob McDonald: yes – it is an unfair individualisation of

the problem of poverty and disguises underlying inequalities.

• Frances Greene: yes – it is bad for regional productivity.

• Me: but what if women want to try it (and have few alternatives) – shouldn’t we campaign and innovate?

Page 13: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Oxfam: British Bangladeshi Women

Sophie Fosker, Oxfam UK Poverty Programme

Page 14: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Empowering British Bangladeshi Women Through Small Enterprise?• Analysis of two small projects

• Interviews with women

• Wider ‘engaged scholarship’

• Creative analysis of ways forward….

Page 15: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

British Bangladeshi Women• Men: 89.8% economically active

17% self-employed.

• Women: 41.8% economically active (v. 74% white women)19% unemployed (v. 14% white women)22% employed (v. half of white women)c.1-2% self-employed (v. 9% white women)

Page 16: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Context: Enterprise Support• Large contracts for ‘streamlined’ services• Relative disconnect from other institutions – Sure Start,

health care, FE, CABWeak pathways for accruing resources

• New Enterprise Allowance but targeted at unemployed

• Trial of Universal Credits……..Uncertain/difficult to access advice

Page 17: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Community Host A / Project A

• Bangladeshi women’s organisation 30yrs +

1. 12 week business programme in English– Ironing business considered but dropped

2. Sewing projects: – Designer handbags– Cheap bags and clothes for the local community

• Unprofitable; no longer trading or meeting

Page 18: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Community Host B / Project B

• Host supports deprived community – particularly British Bangladeshi women

• 10 week pre-enterprise programme– Inconsistent attendance– Initial business ideas

• Take-away, scarves or traditional crafts retail, henna

Page 19: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

The Women We Interviewed• Project A (3)

– First generation migrants from rural Bangladesh resident in the UK for 19-39 years

• Project B (5)– First generation migrants from different areas of

Bangladeshi resident in the UK for 11-28 years– One second generation migrant

• Strong desire for economic activity

Page 20: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Remember: Entrepreneurship Is…

the mobilisation of resources in (profitable) market exchange

Page 21: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

The Women’s Resources

• English language: varied (but often poor)• Education: limited or unrecognised for migrants• Recent work experience: scarce• Networks: highly constrained• Money: varied (if any) control; families under pressure• Skills/competing roles: housewife, mother,

carer, hostess

Page 22: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

The Programmes: Resource Enhacing?

• Knowledge – business planning• Skills – sewing (Proj. A); not modern workplace skills,

accrediting domestic skills or business development• Networks – internal to the programme• Money – no start-up fund (Project A materials covered);

welfare assistance unclear• Other responsibilities - unchallenged

Page 23: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

The Programme: Resource Mobilising?

• Emergent business ideas and some test trading• Attempt to share richer networks: handbag project• Limited:

– exposure to markets and networks– drawing in partners– adapting what can be done with resources at hand– challenge of unrealistic ideas

Page 24: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Outcomes• Engaged with community organisations• Enjoyment/confidence building; aspiration raising• Marginal skill and network development

• Low/no returns for work• Unknown effect on vital welfare entitlements• Debt? (Start-up of retail shop on £3-4k?)• ‘Island’ programme with transient effect?

Page 25: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Proposal: Innovation!• Investing in Integrating and Innovating Pathways to

Enterprise – Commitment from multiple institutions (linking/enhancing)– ‘Effectual’ business development support– Welfare pathway to enterprise from ‘economic inactivity’– Empowering women to campaign for the support they need

• Short-term priority– Investigating the effect of Universal Credits on the self-

employed

Page 26: When Is Enterprise A Viable Option For Women Far From the Labour Market? Dr Julia Rouse Chair, Gender and Enterprise Network Director, MMUBS CBS Clusters

Workshop Discussion

1. Should business start-up be promoted to women far from the labour market?If yes: why?If no: why?

2. What innovations could improve outcomes?

3. What do you think about Julia’s policy proposals?