Effect of Trade Facilitation Practices on Foreign Market Competitiveness of Small and Medium Enterprises in Industrial Area, Nairobi
Abstract
In the present-day contemporary era, the internationalization of businesses has become an ever
increasing phenomenon and thus attracting the attention of many interested parties due to the
influence it has to national economic growth and bringing together different countries. The
purpose of the study was to evaluate the effect of trade facilitation practices on foreign market
competitiveness of small and medium sized enterprises in Industrial Area, Nairobi. In order to
understand the perspectives of the variables in question, the study was premised on two theories;
The Technological, Organizational, and Environmental (TOE) framework and the network
model. This research was a cross-sectional descriptive design where the population of the study
was made up of registered SMEs in Industrial Area, in Nairobi as at December 2020. Data
analysis delved on descriptive and inferential statistics. Notably, a significant portion of the
surveyed businesses falls within the 201–300 employees category (44.8%), reflecting the
predominance of medium-sized enterprises. The age distribution of businesses reveals a fairly
balanced representation across different age categories, with the majority falling within the 10–
20 years range (50.0%). Concerning annual sales from foreign markets, a considerable
proportion of SMEs reported sales between 20 and 50 million Kenyan Shillings (40.5%). The
majority of businesses are local enterprises (80.2%), underscoring the importance of
understanding the dynamics of local SMEs in the context of global competitiveness. In
automation and digitalization, businesses strongly adopt electronic documentation platforms
(Mean = 4.59), indicating a technologically advanced approach. However, the use of automated
freight booking and tracking systems shows some variability (Mean = 3.41). Improvement of
infrastructure and services is generally positively perceived, with high scores for trade
facilitation training (Mean = 4.22) but a slightly lower mean for border infrastructure
enhancement (Mean = 3.85). Institutional and regulatory cooperation scores are consistently
positive, indicating strong government and inter-agency coordination (Mean = 4.54).
additionally, simplification and harmonization of trade procedures receive favorable scores, but
with notable variability, particularly in areas like standardized documents (Mean = 3.17). The
regression analysis further clarified the relationships between trade facilitation practices and
foreign market competitiveness. The overall model was statistically significant (R = .704, R
Square = .496), indicating that the predictors collectively explain a substantial portion of the
variability in foreign market competitiveness. The R Square value of 0.496 indicates that
approximately 49.6% of the variability in competitiveness can be attributed to the included
predictors. Among the predictors, automation and digitalization (b = 0.511, sig. = 0.000),
improvement of infrastructure and services (b = 0.204, sig. = 0.027), institutional and regulatory
cooperation (b = 0.228, sig. = 0.005), and simplification and harmonization (b = 0.211, sig. =
0.001) exhibited positive and statistically significant coefficients, underlining their importance in
shaping SMEs' competitiveness in foreign markets. The study suggests that efforts to bolster the
competitiveness of SMEs in the industrial area of Nairobi should prioritize initiatives that
enhance digital literacy and technology adoption. Policymakers and business support
organizations ought to invest in comprehensive training programs that equip SMEs with the
skills to effectively leverage electronic documentation platforms, automated customs clearance
systems, and other digital tools.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- School of Business [1576]
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