Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance

- One of the policy tools that a government uses to actualize entrepreneurship development is the business incubation program. These government policies come in several forms: fiscal, financial, as well as developmental. The business incubation program has been acknowledged as an instrument to achie...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nkem Okpa Obaji, Aslan Amat Senin, Chikodi Onyemerela
Format: Non-Indexed Article
Published: Vol. 4, Issue 1, pp. 26-37. June 2016 2016
Online Access:http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8003/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.umk.eprints.8003
record_format eprints
spelling my.umk.eprints.80032022-05-23T10:24:38Z http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8003/ Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance Nkem Okpa Obaji Aslan Amat Senin Chikodi Onyemerela - One of the policy tools that a government uses to actualize entrepreneurship development is the business incubation program. These government policies come in several forms: fiscal, financial, as well as developmental. The business incubation program has been acknowledged as an instrument to achieve economic development, hence, the adoption of the concept by various nations. Studies have been advanced concerning business incubation performance, however, empirical scholarly works have shown that such studies have been inconclusive for the reason that results of empirically validated studies were inconsistent. The key objective of this study is to examine the contribution of government policies in the relationship between the critical success factors (CSFs) and the incubator performance. The study involves a data collection process of tenant firms of the Nigerian business incubation program using a population of 253 and a sample size of 153 for questionnaire administration and a focus group interview comprising of 10 respondents, which cut across both tenant firms and incubator managers. The results show that the independent variables and the moderator are indeed predictors of the criterion variable. As the predictors contributed merely 29.4% of the criterion variable, future studies may perhaps examine other critical factors alongside the extant constructs, which may contribute further to incubator performance. Vol. 4, Issue 1, pp. 26-37. June 2016 2016 Non-Indexed Article NonPeerReviewed Nkem Okpa Obaji and Aslan Amat Senin and Chikodi Onyemerela (2016) Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance. Journal of Entrepreneurship and Business, 4 (1). pp. 26-37. ISSN 2289-8298
institution Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
building Perpustakaan Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
content_source UMK Institutional Repository
url_provider http://umkeprints.umk.edu.my/
description - One of the policy tools that a government uses to actualize entrepreneurship development is the business incubation program. These government policies come in several forms: fiscal, financial, as well as developmental. The business incubation program has been acknowledged as an instrument to achieve economic development, hence, the adoption of the concept by various nations. Studies have been advanced concerning business incubation performance, however, empirical scholarly works have shown that such studies have been inconclusive for the reason that results of empirically validated studies were inconsistent. The key objective of this study is to examine the contribution of government policies in the relationship between the critical success factors (CSFs) and the incubator performance. The study involves a data collection process of tenant firms of the Nigerian business incubation program using a population of 253 and a sample size of 153 for questionnaire administration and a focus group interview comprising of 10 respondents, which cut across both tenant firms and incubator managers. The results show that the independent variables and the moderator are indeed predictors of the criterion variable. As the predictors contributed merely 29.4% of the criterion variable, future studies may perhaps examine other critical factors alongside the extant constructs, which may contribute further to incubator performance.
format Non-Indexed Article
author Nkem Okpa Obaji
Aslan Amat Senin
Chikodi Onyemerela
spellingShingle Nkem Okpa Obaji
Aslan Amat Senin
Chikodi Onyemerela
Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
author_facet Nkem Okpa Obaji
Aslan Amat Senin
Chikodi Onyemerela
author_sort Nkem Okpa Obaji
title Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
title_short Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
title_full Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
title_fullStr Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
title_sort sustainable government policy: a catalyst for sustainable incubator performance
publisher Vol. 4, Issue 1, pp. 26-37. June 2016
publishDate 2016
url http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8003/
_version_ 1763303921800970240
score 13.209306