000 02913nam a22002417a 4500
003 KeNa-CAJ
005 20231109160607.0
008 231109b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789966817860
040 _aKeNa-CAJ
_beng
_cKeNa-CAJ
082 _223
_a338
_b.KIN
100 _aKinyua, Beatrice.
_914914
245 _aThe nexus between innovation gap and firm ownership in Kenya :
_ba gender approach /
_cBeatrice Kinyua, Miriam Mwiti.
260 _aNairobi, Kenya :
_bKenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis,
_c[2021]
300 _avi, 42p. :
_bcolor illustrations ;
_c25cm.
440 _aKIPPRA discussion paper ;
_vno. 271
_914787
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 38-42).
505 _aIntroduction -- Innovation resources, gender stereotypes and cultural norms and policy -- Literature review -- Methodology -- Findings and discussions -- Conclusion and recommendations.
520 _a"This paper sought to explore the gender gap in innovation among firms in Kenya. The studys' objective was to determine the extent of the gender innovation gap for male-owned and female-owned firms, and the factors contributing to this gap. Subsequently, the study incorporated the Blinder Oaxaca decomposition technique adopting the extended non-linear regression version by Fairlie. Cross-sectional data was sourced from the World Bank Enterprise Survey 2018. The findings highlighted that the probability of female owned-firms to innovative was lower than that of male-owned firms, an indication that there was an innovation gap. Further, it was established that male-owned enterprises had better innovation outcomes as they possessed resources that female-owned firms did not have. These resources include hiring of an experienced top manager who many require large compensation, thus hindering female-owned firms from recruiting due to the associated financial resource constraints. Additionally, there were unobservable factors that formed a large portion of the innovation gap, indicating that there were structural biases that favoured male-owned firms to be innovative over female-owned firms. These structural biases are often associated with discrimination. These findings therefore shed light on gender inequalities that exist in the context of innovation. There is need for policy makers to promote gender equality by advocating and formulating policies that address structural biases, thus creating a level playing field in terms of promoting impartiality in innovation among male-owned and female-owned firms in Kenya. Reducing the unobservable structural biases that accounted for a higher share in gender innovation gap would significantly reduce the innovation gap in Kenya." --Abstract.
700 _aMwiti, Miriam.
_914915
710 _aKenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis
_914805
942 _2ddc
_cGR
_e23
_h338
_i.KIN
999 _c2154
_d2154