Sustainable entrepreneurship development in Oman: A multi-stakeholder qualitative study

Abstract

Purpose: Even though sustainable entrepreneurship has increasingly received researchers’ attention in recent years, the topic remains rather under-researched in natural resources’ rich Arabian gulf countries such as Oman. Hence, the current paper fills this gap in the literature and is one of the first attempts to assess the state of sustainable entrepreneurship development in Oman from a multi-stakeholder perspective. Design/Methodology/Approach: The current paper uses a qualitative research approach where in-depth semi-structured interviews were undertaken with twelve (12) respondents representing relevant stakeholders of sustainable entrepreneurship development in Oman. Our interviewees included four (4) sustainable entrepreneurs, four (4) policy makers, and four (4) educationists representing entrepreneurial skills development institutes in Oman. Findings: Our findings highlight that despite some positive improvements, several critical challenges remain, which hinder sustainable entrepreneurship development. We further found the role of FinTech to be critical in this concern by all stakeholders, though its usage and acceptance remain low. Also, the costs associated with the post-carbon (sustainable) economy and different profitability evolution have resulted in a slow change in the policy development in this concern. From educational (skills development) perspective, a lack of context specific training programmes and culture-based hesitations appeared to be hindering achieving sustainable entrepreneurship possibilities in Oman. The premature entrepreneurial ecosystem, bureaucracy, and lack of human capital (attaining as well as retention) appeared to be significant challenges for entrepreneurs. Finally, our findings highlighted the need for cross-sector collaboration with clear benchmarks for effective policy development concerning sustainable entrepreneurship in Oman. Originality: The current paper is the first academic study explicitly highlighting the state of sustainable entrepreneurship in Oman by incorporating the development initiatives as well as the major challenges in the analysis. Secondly, our study is also a pioneering work specifying the interlinkage between financing (FinTech), policy initiatives and skills development, and the development of a sustainable entrepreneurship ecosystem in an under-researched context of Oman. Finally, the transition to a sustainable economy is challenging in natural resources’ dependent economies like Oman, as it needs to be supported by the mindset change in the larger society (legitimacy). In this concern, our paper is one of the first academic endeavours to also specify the role of legitimacy from the perspective of different stakeholders (and larger society) for sustainable entrepreneurship development in such contexts

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