Economic size and performance of dispersed and clustered small scale enterprises in India: Recent evidence and implications
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study is the empirical measurement and analysis of economic size and performance of dispersed and clustered small‐scale enterprises (SSEs) in India.
Design/methodology/approach
Methodology is descriptive and comparative, using a combination of different official databases. Economic size is measured by distribution of SSEs by employment, output, fixed capital investment, and export variables. Measurement of economic performance is focused on output/capital ratio, output/labour ratio, and labour/capital ratio.
Findings
The results offer evidence for economic diversity in the size compositions and performance variations of dispersed and clustered SSEs; and bigger economic size and higher economic performance of clustered than dispersed SSEs.
Research limitations/implications
Subject to the comparability of economic structure, the results and implications for India are of relevance for promotion and development of clustered SSEs in other developing countries.
Practical implications
From the viewpoint of policy formulation, the results offer a strong empirical basis for a cluster approach rather than a dispersed approach for promotion and development of SSEs in India. The cluster approach has implications for establishing linkages between formal and informal SSEs and for elimination of smallness of dispersed SSEs.
Originality/value
The paper provides a comparative analysis of economic size and performance of the dispersed and clustered SSEs by consolidating the diverse databases in India.
Keywords
Citation
Narayana, M.R. (2007), "Economic size and performance of dispersed and clustered small scale enterprises in India: Recent evidence and implications", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 34 No. 9, pp. 599-611. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068290710778624
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited