Its time governments of Least Development Countries (LDCs) review their job creation for a full-fledged economic transformation.<\/p>\n
Urging LDCs on those lines, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) said LDCs should prioritize dynamic enterprises and introduce encouraging them to create job opportunities, end poverty and drive economic growth.<\/p>\n
UNCTAD said this in its \u2018The Least Developed Countries Report 2018: Entrepreneurship for Structural Transformation<\/strong>\u2019 released on November 20, 2018. The report analyzed socio-economic conditions of the 47-member LDC group nations for supporting the creation and growth of high-impact businesses.<\/p>\n And, the report found that various structural factors such as limited funds, insufficient infrastructure, high registration costs, poverty, restrictions on women empowerment, lack of institutions, elevated political, economic and environmental risks are obstructing entrepreneurship and growth of enterprises.<\/p>\n \u201cThe result is that most firms in LDCs are micro or small enterprises and 58 percent of the formal firms have at most 20 employees,\u201d reads UNCTAD\u2019s<\/span> statement.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n According to the report, majority of public in LDCs are choosing micro and small-scale enterprises out of societal compulsion.<\/p>\n \u201cEntrepreneurship is dominated by self-employment (which accounts for 70 percent of total employment), informal micro and small enterprises with low chances of survival and growth and little propensity to innovate. Small companies account for 58 percent of all firms in these countries,\u201d the statement adds.<\/p>\n In his address to media on the report, Former Vice-Chairman of National Planning Commission Swarnim Wagle said LDCs including Nepal<\/a> have been failing in linking themselves to the global supply chain.<\/p>\n \u201cGlobal Value Chains (GVCs) have tightened the conditions for LDC local entrepreneurship. It\u2019s harder competition for many of these countries,\u201d noted Wagle, adding that these countries need to reframe their policies to fit in potential opportunities offered by GVCs.<\/p>\n \u201cThe major challenge is scaling up the business<\/a> owing to the lack of access to financing as the sector that we are working is not even recognized as an industry,\u201d says Aayushi KC<\/span>, the CEO of Khalisisi, a start-up that has been actively working on waste management<\/a>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Various other start-up company leaders present at the meet said they are facing challenges within scaling up businesses.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Its time governments of Least Development Countries (LDCs) review their job creation for a full-fledged economic…<\/span><\/p>\n