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Entrepreneurial intent of final-year commerce students in the rural provinces of South Africa

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dc.contributor.advisor Swanepoel, Elana
dc.contributor.author Malebana, Mmakgabo Justice
dc.date.accessioned 2013-02-01T07:43:07Z
dc.date.available 2013-02-01T07:43:07Z
dc.date.issued 2013-02
dc.identifier.citation Malebana, Mmakgabo Justice (2013) Entrepreneurial intent of final-year commerce students in the rural provinces of South Africa, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/8588> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/8588
dc.description.abstract Owing to the fact that entrepreneurship is widely considered to be a mechanism for reducing unemployment, the purpose of the study was to assess whether final-year Commerce students in the predominantly rural provinces, the Eastern Cape Province and the Limpopo Province, have the intention to start their own businesses.The study draws heavily from entrepreneurial intent models and focuses on the relationship between three key variables, namely, exposure to entrepreneurship education, awareness of entrepreneurial support and social capital to establish whether they are related to the intention of final-year Commerce studentsto start their own businesses. The literature review concentrated on entrepreneurial intent and entrepreneurial intent models; government entrepreneurial support initiatives in South Africa and in other countries and their role in the development of entrepreneurial intent, emergence of new ventures and the growth of small, medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs); entrepreneurship education and its role in enhancing entrepreneurial self-efficacy, entrepreneurial competencies and entrepreneurial intent;the influence of social capital on entrepreneurial intent and the different stages on the new venture life-cycle; and concludes with the link between entrepreneurship and the establishment of SMMEs. A survey was conducted among National Diploma (ND): Internal Auditing, Cost and Management Accounting and Financial information systems students (IAUD, CMA and FIS) (who had six months exposure to entrepreneurship education), ND: Entrepreneurship/Small Business Management (E/SBM) (who had three years exposure to entrepreneurship education) and ND: Management (without exposure to entrepreneurship education). The respondents for the study comprised 355 final year students of which 276 were from Walter Sisulu University in the Eastern Cape Province and 79 were from Tshwane University of Technology (Polokwane Campus) in the LimpopoProvince.Data was analysed using descriptive statistics and nonparametric statistics. The findings reveal that the majority of the respondents had the intention to start a business in the future.The entrepreneurial intent of the ND: E/SBM students was v stronger than the entrepreneurial intent of the ND: IAUD, CMA and FIS students and ND: Management students. Some significant relationships were found between entrepreneurial intent and the key variables of the study. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resources (xxvii, 779 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.rights University of South Africa
dc.subject Entrepreneurial intent en
dc.subject Theory of planned behaviour en
dc.subject Entrepreneurial self-efficacy en
dc.subject Exposure to entrepreneurship education en
dc.subject Social capital en
dc.subject Shapero and Sokol's model of entrepreneurial event
dc.subject Awareness of government entrepreneurial support
dc.subject Model of entrepreneurship development
dc.subject Final-year commerce students
dc.subject Entrepreneurial competencies
dc.subject.ddc 658.0220968
dc.subject.lcsh Small business -- Management -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Entrepreneurship -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh New business enterprises -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Success in business -- South Africa en
dc.title Entrepreneurial intent of final-year commerce students in the rural provinces of South Africa en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Business Management en
dc.description.degree D. Com. (Business Management)


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