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firms, fourth by permitting greater specialization
in manufacturing, and fifth by
raising productivity and employment in both the modern and traditional sectors.
(Gries and Naudé 2008a, 25)
This is not to dismiss the crucial role played by foreign-invested enterprises, and
large domestic firms too, in advancing a developing economy. But it does recognize the
important role
played by more innovative SMEs, and acknowledges that they are not
passive spectators sitting on the sidelines of an economic development exercise from
which they are largely divorced.
However, the ability of more innovative SMEs to perform this economic function is
significantly determined by the business environment in which they are obliged to operate.
Without conducive conditions—the right kind of business enabling environment—in which
to develop and grow, SMEs are likely to remain: (a) bonsai-like in stature; and (b) much
less dynamic in their actions. This explains in large part why attention is often placed on
various global indices and indicators that attempt to measure and compare the business
environments in different countries. The better indices have a genuine benefit in identifying
issues and comparing
them across countries, as a basic form of diagnostic analysis.
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