Author:
Mahmoud Mahmoud Ahmad,Umar Umar Habibu,Baita Abubakar Jamilu,Ado Muhammad Bilyaminu
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to augment the present literature on the relationship between relative financial deprivation (RFD), financial anxiety (FA), access to Islamic financing (AIF) and financial satisfaction (FS) of micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) owners. Principally, the study examines the moderating role of AIF on the RFD–FS and FA–FS relationships.
Design/methodology/approach
Quantitative survey approach was used to collect data through self-administered questionnaires from MSME owners. Partial least square (PLS) structural equation modelling (SEM) version 3.2.7 was used to analyse 208 retrieved questionnaires.
Findings
The results confirm that the RFD–FS relationship is negatively significant, but the FA–FS relationship is not significant. However, the direct relationship between AIF and FS is positively significant. Conversely, AIF failed to moderate the RFD–FS and FA–FS relationships.
Practical implications
The study specifies that the existence of RFD will decrease the FS of MSME owners, and therefore, RFD should be eliminated at all costs. However, the greater the AIF, the stronger will be the FS of MSME owners. Thus, policymakers and owners of MSMEs should emphasize on AIF to foster FS. Nevertheless, AIF could not redirect the negative impact of RFD and FA on MSME owners’ FS.
Originality/value
This study, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, is the first to examine the moderating role of AIF on the RFD–FS and FA–FS relationships among MSME owners. Notwithstanding the importance of small business owners for economic development, the literature on MSME entrepreneurs FS has been neglected. This study also uncovers new theoretical knowledge by revealing the inability of AIF to alter the RFD–FS and FA–FS relationships.
Subject
Strategy and Management,Accounting,Business and International Management
Reference65 articles.
1. Does access to formal finance matter for welfare and inequality? Micro level evidence from Nigeria,2017
2. Consumer behaviour of Islamic home financing: investigating its determinants from the theory of Islamic consumer behaviour;Humanomics,2017
3. College students and financial distress: exploring debt, financial satisfaction, and financial anxiety;Journal of Financial Counselling and Planning,2013
4. Financial goal setting, financial anxiety, and solution-focused financial therapy (SFFT): a quasi-experimental outcome study;Contemporary Family Therapy,2020
5. Islamic microfinance: fulfilling social and developmental expectation,2010
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献