Determinants Of Credit Accessibility in the Informal Sector: The Case of Smallholder Businesses in Migori County, Kenya

Authors

  • Onyango F. O Maseno University
  • Dr. Momanyi G Maseno University
  • Prof. Mukras M. S Maseno University

Keywords:

Credit access, informal sector, socio-economic factors, institutional factors, logistic regression.

Abstract

The informal sector, estimated to constitute 98% of businesses in Kenya, represents 83% of total employment and created 768,000 new jobs which represent 90.7% of total new jobs created in 2019 alone. Despite the critical role played by the sector in job creation and employment, it is faced with numerous challenges and constraints one of them being access to credit. Access to credit does not only have adverse effects on the informal smallholder businesses alone but on the entire economy. The study seeks to analyze the determinants of Socio-Economic and the Institutional factors on credit accessibility in the informal sector for the smallholder businesses in Migori County. The study employed descriptive survey research design. Targeting 4,756 traders in total, a three-stage stratified random sampling method was employed to select the smallholder traders in the study area represented by a sample size of 476 businesspersons. Structured questionnaires and interview schedules were developed, pre-tested and used for collecting quantitative data for the study. Piloting of the study was carried out to ascertain the validity and reliability of the data collection instrument. The targeted sample smallholder businesspersons successfully interviewed were 446 in total, representing a response rate of 93.70%. Descriptive statistics and the logistic regression model were used in analyzing quantitative data. The output from the study model indicates that 245(54.9%) of the sampled businesspersons were credit users whereas the remaining 201(45.1%) were non-credit users. Experience in credit use, one of the socio-economic factors expected to influence credit accessibility was statistically significant and positively related to credit access at 1% probability (.335, p = .001), in line with the prior research expectations. Even though positively related and consistent with the a priori expectation, the contribution of the propensity to take risks (attitude towards risk) by the smallholder businesspersons was insignificant (.515, p = .743) at 5%. However, all the institutional factors were found to be statistically insignificant and negatively related to credit accessibility. Even though consistent with the a priori expectation, the contribution of distance from credit source in the prediction of the model was insignificant at 5% (-.034, p = 0.215). Membership by the smallholder businesspersons to multi-purpose cooperatives and or business associations was negatively and insignificantly related to credit access by the same group in the study area, contradicting the a priori expectation (-.274, p =.529). The outcome of the study would be useful to policy makers, Micro-Financial Institutions, academicians and future researchers in identifying innovative options and institutional arrangements that would serve as an input for formulating credit policy and advancing arguments in future research. The study concludes that a large number of the informal sector smallholder businesspersons have never accessed credit which implies a very huge potential demand for credit.

Author Biographies

Onyango F. O, Maseno University

Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics

Dr. Momanyi G, Maseno University

Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics

Prof. Mukras M. S, Maseno University

Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics

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Published

2025-11-03

How to Cite

Onyango, F., G, M., & M. S, M. . (2025). Determinants Of Credit Accessibility in the Informal Sector: The Case of Smallholder Businesses in Migori County, Kenya. Edith Cowan Journal of Economics, 5(1). Retrieved from https://edithcowanjournal.org/journals/index.php/journal-of-economics/article/view/135

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