Institutional and regulatory framework conditions for SMEs
Although regulatory barriers to entrepreneurship have declined over time and efforts have aimed to cut the red tape for businesses and improve transparency and cost-efficiency of public administration, the complexity of regulatory procedures is still a major obstacle for SMEs and entrepreneurs. Costs of complying with administrative requirements remain comparatively higher for smaller businesses. Inefficient insolvency regimes limit the restructuring of viable firms and the second chance offered to entrepreneurs.
This section covers a broad range of issues such as product market regulation, employment regulation, firm creation regulation and insolvency regimes, taxation, competition, court and legal framework, and public governance, including e-government. Some considerations on the quality of land administration for doing business are also introduced.
Market conditions
There is a large cross-country diversity in the opportunities and challenges for SMEs to access markets. Conditions for entering international and public markets have generally improved for SMEs in recent years, as explicit barriers to trade and investments have been reduced; increased public attention has been given to levelling the playing field; and improved infrastructure, especially information and communication technologies (ICT), has helped SMEs reach scale without mass and get involved in global activities.
This section places emphasis on the domestic market so as to account for the fact that SMEs are primarily local actors embedded in nearby markets and ecosystem. Issues such as internal market dynamics (e.g. concentration, specialisation, digitalisation etc.), positioning in global value chains (GVCs) and the presence of multinationals (MNEs), the size and practices of public procurement or the prevalence of the informal economy are explored.
Infrastructure
Physical, digital and network infrastructure is the foundation of a dynamic business ecosystem. The quality of infrastructure is especially relevant for SME entry into distant markets and engagement in GVCs. Likewise, well-functioning infrastructures ensure secure and cost-efficient access to strategic resources. Typically, market and system failures discourage large-scale investments and partnerships that would be needed for strengthening and maintaining quality infrastructure, making this issue a policy domain of predilection. Governments play a key role as facilitator in building public-private partnerships, implementing system-enabling instruments (e.g. interfaces, platforms) or setting standards, etc.
This section looks at infrastructure capacity and performance in various areas including logistics and transport, energy, internet and ICT (e.g. digital security and price) and domestic R&D and innovation. Particular efforts are made for examining the presence of world innovation hubs in countries and capturing the density of domestic and international knowledge networks.
Access to finance
Accessing appropriate sources of finance across all stages of their life cycle is critical for SMEs to start, innovate and grow. Bank lending as the most common source of external finance for SMEs has largely recovered after the financial crisis making it easier for SMEs to access credit. Alternative sources, including asset-based and equity funding, have also become more widespread, offering multiple and competing options to different profiles of firms and investors. Yet, SMEs remain undercapitalised and heavily reliant on straight debt. Barriers both on the supply side (i.e. information asymmetries, lack of collateral and higher transaction costs, etc.) and on the demand side (i.e. lack of awareness and financial skills, etc.) persist, and recent evidence suggests that financial institutions have become even more risk-averse, placing an extra burden on high-risk SMEs or on firms without collateral.
This section builds on the work carried out for the Financing SMEs and Entrepreneurs: an OECD Scoreboard as well as the G20/OECD High-Level Principles on SME Financing (OECD, 2018[3]). It intends to differentiate traditional sources of funding from alternative forms, especially in the context of the digital transition (e.g. cryptocurrencies and initial coin offerings, peer-to-peer lending and crowdfunding, etc.). It also looks at firms’ self-funding capacity and the state of the banking system as data allow.
Access to skills
SMEs face greater difficulties in identifying, attracting and developing skills than larger firms. Although efforts to build entrepreneurship competencies have increased significantly over time, recent survey results show that people are not more confident in their ability to start a business. Yet skills are key assets for technology and innovation absorption and for managing the organisational changes needed during the transition.
This section combines a focus on entrepreneurial culture with a focus on human capital and skills development. Issues such as student enrolment and performance in formal education, adult literacy, training access, entrepreneurial culture and education, and skills use at work are developed. In addition, this section examines labour market conditions, including job quality and the scope of skills mismatch (as reflected in employment and unemployment trends), non-standard employment and job strain.
Access to innovation assets
Innovation results from a process of accumulation through which firms increase their stock of knowledge-based capital.
This section gives a strong focus on the stock of tangible and intangible knowledge assets SMEs can access and manage by exploring the diffusion of key ICT tools in firms and looking at the extent to which SMEs have built enough internal capacity to participate in technology-intensive activities or integrating R&D and innovative networks. It covers various issues including technology equipment, intellectual property rights (patents, trademarks), new IT-enabled organisational and marketing practices, R&D and innovation performed by SMEs and SME integration into innovation networks.