Chapter 12 Incentives to
support new business enterprises
Introduction
12.1
Small businesses are an important component of the Australian economy,
accounting for over a third of industry value added[1]
in 2009-10. Small businesses also provide for almost half of total industry
employment, equating to approximately 4.8 million Australians in 2009–10.[2]
12.2
Migrants have enjoyed high-profile business success in Australia. In
2011, three out of the top ten of Australia’s richest people were migrants, or
30 per cent of the top ten.[3] This is roughly
equivalent to the proportion of migrants of working age in the Australian
population and is a remarkable achievement given the challenges of transition
in a new country. They have overcome disadvantages through determination and
hard work, and in the process have created jobs and wealth in Australia.
12.3
Many successful migrant entrepreneurs start out their careers through a
small business. This chapter examines what the Australian Government can do to
help migrant entrepreneurs quickly understand the regulatory environment and
start a business.
The profile of migrant small businesses
Migrants
12.4
Two groups of academics in Australia have recently conducted major research
on migrant small businesses. Kerry Carrington at the University of New England
cites figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showing that
approximately 30 per cent of small businesses in Australia are migrant owned,
which is similar to the proportion of migrants in the working age population.
12.5
Professor Hugo of the University of Adelaide notes that migration and
entrepreneurship require similar characteristics to be successful:
There is a substantial body of literature on the relationship
between migration and entrepreneurship ... It is apparent that there are a
number of personal attributes which are associated with both processes – a
propensity to take risks, not to accept the status quo, to take advantage of
opportunities when they arise, etcetera. It is certainly the case that many
refugees have these characteristics.[4]
12.6
Although many migrant small businesses are established by people who
entered Australia under business migration schemes, it is argued that many
others are established as a matter of necessity. If migrants cannot obtain
mainstream employment through lack of fluency in English, the risk of starting
a small business may well be worth the financial security it could provide.
Another reason why migrants may not be able to obtain work is discrimination in
workplaces, leading to highly educated individuals doing low-skill work. The
Committee received evidence of this in relation to African migrants, in
particular.[5] Barriers to employment
for migrants and refugees are discussed in greater length in Chapter 9 of this
report.
12.7
Carrington also noted that migrant small businesses in Australia
generally conduct some of their work outside their individual migrant community
and are not restricted to enclaves. Further, family members are often brought
in to help the business because they are more prepared to work longer hours and
it is easier to simultaneously conduct other aspects of family life, such as
child minding.[6]
12.8
However, there are few studies on whether migrant small businesses are
profitable. Professor Hugo cites a study from 1988 that examined the success or
failure of 13 449 small businesses, of which 16 per cent were run by migrants.
The results indicated that migrant small businesses of that time enjoyed
above-average growth and success:
They found that migrants had on average less education but
more experience than their Australian-born counterparts ... Immigrants made
less use of credit to finance their businesses and although they started off
smaller than the Australian-born owned businesses, they grew faster and were
more profitable. They also had a lower failure rate. Strahan and Williams
conclude that immigrants are generally more successful in small business than
Australia-born and that immigrant entrepreneurs make an important economic
contribution.[7]
12.9
The Committee agrees that Australia has benefited from migrants’
entrepreneurial spirit through the goods and services they provide and the
wealth they create.
Humanitarian refugees
12.10
Professor Hugo has also conducted research into humanitarian refugees’
businesses. Of all refugee-humanitarian entrants, the proportion of
owner/managers is 19 per cent, higher than the average for Australian‑born
individuals at 16 per cent. Some country groups have rates of running a
business in excess of 20 or 30 per cent, in particular Eastern Europeans, as
well refugees from Lebanon, Iran, Iraq and Somalia. On average, humanitarian
refugee women also have higher rates of business ownership than Australian-born
women, with rates of 14 per cent and 11 per cent respectively.[8]
12.11
High rates of business activity among humanitarian migrants also tends
to be concentrated among groups that have spent the most time in Australia. The
usual pathway for them to start a business is to first take up regular
employment and use this as a means of building up capital to establish a
business later on. This is almost always a matter of necessity, given the
forced nature of their migration. To take the Vietnamese as an example, in 1990
only 11 per cent of working Vietnamese-born were either employers or self
employed. By 2006, this had increased to 18 per cent.[9]
12.12
Professor Hugo argues that the general perception of migrants
establishing their own business through necessity does not currently apply to
humanitarian refugees. Overwhelmingly, in discussions with them, they
emphasised that they worked for wages initially for the purpose of ‘identifying
opportunities and on taking up the chance to really establish themselves and
their families in Australia.’[10]
Supporting migrant business enterprise
12.13
The Committee recognises the importance of supporting migrant business
enterprise in Australia. During the inquiry, the Committee was informed of some
of the inherent difficulties faced by migrants in their attempts to establish a
new business. These included a lack of understanding of Australian business
regulations and difficulty in acquiring loans from financial institutions.[11]
12.14
An important mechanism for supporting migrant business enterprise is
business mentoring. The call for migrant business mentoring programs was
presented to the Committee in evidence from Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre
(SMRC) and the Ethnic Communities Council of Victoria.[12]
The SMRC’s Ms Rosemary Kelada spoke of the significant role business mentoring
plays in providing access to networks and shared expertise to help guide
migrants through the Australian business environment.[13]
Other suggestions made to the Committee included:
- a mix of
professional/technical and financial support;[14]
- information and
understanding of Australian taxation and business laws;[15]
- a whole-of-government
approach whereby each government department with an economic agenda assists
migrants to establish businesses;[16]
and
- easily accessible
education programs that take into account low levels of English proficiency and
the literacy skills of potential establishers of ethnic small businesses.[17]
12.15
Throughout the inquiry, the Committee was made aware of a number of
programs and initiatives designed to give migrants and refugees the skills to
competently start and maintain their own small business. However due to a lack
of funding, a lot of these programs were only available on a short-term basis.
Small Business Victoria (SBV)
12.16
Within the Department of Business and Innovation, SBV provides a range
of low-cost programs, services, information and tools to assist new and
prospective small business people to get their enterprises started as quickly
as possible. These services include: online, telephone and
in-person information on starting a business, licensing and registration;
workshops and seminars on starting a business; and the month-long Energise
Enterprise Small Business Festival each year.[18]
12.17
The Victorian Government’s submission noted that they had called for
expressions of interest from multicultural business owners to join its new
Multicultural Business Ministerial Council. The Council provides advice on policy
initiatives and priorities to support multicultural businesses, including the
30 per cent of Victorian small business operators born overseas.[19]
12.18
The Victorian Government also noted that:
…Small Business Victoria -through the Global Skills for
Victoria program – presents an information briefing on SBV advocacy,
programs and services at the Victorian Government's bi-monthly "Live in
Victoria Business Migrant Seminar". The tailored content of these seminars
is generally presented in Chinese (Mandarin) as the predominant language of
business migrants to Victoria.[20]
The Enterprising Women Project
12.19
Implemented from 2005 to 2007, the Enterprising Women Project sought to
give migrant women in the northern suburbs of Melbourne the skills and
resources to establish their own business. In partnership with Spectrum Migrant
Resource Centre, Women’s Health in the North had overall carriage of the
project. The components of the program were:
- a financial literacy
program, to give women basic financial literacy skills; and
- the establishment of
an association, Northern Enterprising Women, to provide ongoing informal
support to women starting up their own business.
12.20
On most metrics, the project was a success. Follow-up interviews were
conducted with 22 of the 98 women in the business education program, of whom 13
(60 per cent) started up a business. Demand well exceeded targets for most of
the project. The targets for the business education and financial literacy
sections were 36 and 120 women respectively, whereas the number of participants
was 98 and 250 respectively. The target for loans was 20, though only 11 women
took out loans of $2 000 each.[21] The reasons that women
usually gave for not taking out a loan were that they:
- did not want to add
to their financial burden;
- wanted to further
research their business idea;
- weren’t ready to
start a business yet; and
- only wanted to use
their savings and income as capital.[22]
12.21
Representatives from Women’s Health in the North informed the Committee
that all of the 11 loans handed out were successfully paid back. While it was
generally felt that $2 000 was a minimal amount to help establish a business,
the women agreed that the money was a very welcome contribution.[23]
12.22
The feedback that participants gave on the financial literacy program demonstrates
the barriers that exist for recent migrants in establishing a business or
managing their finances in Australia. Some of their comments were:
We should have been taught this when we arrived...
We spent six years in a camp, we had no banks, no ATMs, no
accounts, no fees and no charges. We kept what we had close. The idea that our
money is safe somewhere else (in a bank) is very different...
I didn’t know we had a choice in banks. When we arrived
someone set it up for me, showed me how to use it and left. I didn’t know about
fees or anything…
I used the ATM the other day for the first time without my
husband. It wasn’t that hard after all.[24]
12.23
The key lessons and suggestions from the project included:
- while a $2 000 loan
was helpful, participants suggested that start up costs for a small business
are more realistically $5 000 to $6 000;
- expanding the project
to include men;
- the project was
better suited to women with good English and workplace skills – employment
programs may better suit other individuals;
- free childcare and
transport assisted participation; and
- mentoring would be a
useful addition to the program.[25]
12.24
The women who participated in the association, Northern Enterprising
Women, found it helpful in developing the skills required to operate a formal
organisation. It also gave members practical information about establishing and
operating a business, as well as social networks, support and reducing the
isolation that new arrivals often feel. However, it was difficult for the
members to sustain given their family and business commitments, especially once
Women’s Health in the North reduced its support role.
Conclusion
12.25
The Committee recognises the valuable work of Women’s Health in the
North and Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre in running the Enterprising Women
Project. The Committee is of the view that the project has demonstrated that
small scale support for migrant small businesses can allow migrants to put
their entrepreneurial spirit to good use. The project also demonstrated that
its financial literacy components were very helpful to migrants, regardless of
whether they established a business or not.
12.26
The Enterprising Women Project should inform and be the basis of a
nation-wide program to improve migrants’ financial literacy and encourage and advise
those who want to ‘have a go’ to start their own business.
Recommendation 32 |
12.27 |
The Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship and the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science, Research
and Tertiary Education work with the Department of Education, Employment and
Workplace Relations to investigate the barriers affecting the full
participation of CALD individuals in the Australian workforce.
The Committee recommends that the existing New Enterprise
Incentive Scheme be expanded beyond Job Services Australia, and adapted to
ensure the needs of men and women of CALD background, including refugees, are
better catered for. The Enterprising Women Project is a useful model. The
expanded Scheme should be flexible in the way it provides incentives to
support new migrant businesses, and include initiatives such as mentoring,
financial skills and literacy, microcredit and no interest loans.
|
Maria Vamvakinou MP
Chair