Business start-up in Malaysia: Motivations, obstacles, government support and demographic-related traits

Entrepreneurship is becoming increasingly important in today’s world due to its effectiveness and applicability in a country’s economic development.In this regards, many developed and developing countries are investing maximum resources and efforts to promote entrepreneurship.To achieve the goal, po...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ooi, Yeng Keat, Bhatti, Muhammad Awais
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Management and Business Research (IMBRe), Universiti Utara Malaysia 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/20696/1/JBMA%202%201%202012%2059%2075.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/20696/
http://imbre.uum.edu.my/images/jbmavol2junno12012/Business-start-up.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Entrepreneurship is becoming increasingly important in today’s world due to its effectiveness and applicability in a country’s economic development.In this regards, many developed and developing countries are investing maximum resources and efforts to promote entrepreneurship.To achieve the goal, policy makers as well as economic stakeholders are playing their roles in promoting entrepreneurship. This includes educational institutions emphasizing on motivating fresh graduates to choose entrepreneurship as their future career.Therefore, the purpose of this study is to highlight the factors that resist and encourage fresh graduates to choose and set up their own business.This paper categorises four factors namely demographic, motivational, challenges of obstacles and government support.This paper proposes that motivational factors such as family security, independence, intrinsic and extrinsic rewards influence fresh graduates’ decision to choose and set up a new business. With reference to challenges, this paper highlights that a lack of finance, complicated processes involved in setting up a business, high rate of taxes and duties, poor business infrastructure resist fresh graduates to dabble into entrepreneurial activities.This paper also points out that demographic factors like gender, previous experience and family background do influence fresh graduates’ decision to choose and set up a new business.In addition, this paper explains that government support in terms of providing business assistances like microfinance schemes, business-friendly system, low rate of taxes and duties. Easy business-related rules and regulations also encourage fresh graduates to choose and set up a new business. Finally, the paper proposes few propositions based on the previous literature and invites any researcher to empirically test them in order to further strengthen the entrepreneurship literature.