New report identifies challenges faced by Black entrepreneurs in Alberta
CBC
A new report sheds a light on the experiences and challenges of Black entrepreneurs in the province.
The State of Black Entrepreneurs in Alberta, released Monday, details findings from a research collaboration between the Africa Centre and the Pan African Collaboration for Excellence (PACE) at the University of Alberta.
It is intended as a means to fill a knowledge gap in understanding local Black entrepreneurship, for which data is scarce or non-existent.
Philomena Okeke-Ihejirika, the director of PACE and lead researcher, said what likely underlines much of the findings is the systemic inequities that Black people face.
"Race is very, very crucial. We need to start collecting that data so that we know what is happening."
Twelve people were interviewed in the first phase and a questionnaire gathered input from 256 participants in the second phase for a snapshot of the experiences of Black entrepreneurs. Eighty-eight per cent of participants were immigrants from Africa or the children of immigrants from Africa.
A majority of respondents felt racial attitudes toward Blacks were impacting their ability to succeed.
Okeke-Ihejirika said one idea the survey reinforced was that Black entrepreneurs have limited social capital networks to start businesses.
"People who start businesses in our communities do not have a grandfather or grandmother who have left some wealth with them."
Participants started businesses in a variety of industries — from retail to agriculture. The most commonly reported was manufacturing (17.2 per cent), followed by service (16.8 per cent) and then construction (12.9 per cent). The most commonly cited reason for starting the business was increasing personal/family wealth.
Okeke-Ihejirika said she was surprised that many did not even approach banks to get off the ground — those that did, she said, were not very successful. The most common financial resource was personal savings (50.9 per cent), followed by family savings (46.6 per cent) and credit cards (39.2 per cent).
"That is not acceptable. That is not going to lead to actually making your business prosper," Okeke-Ihejirika said.
For both initial and current challenges, the most common answer was lack of availability of credit and loans as well as availability and cost of labour
Only 22 per cent of participants said they had taken any kind of training or education for starting, running or managing a business.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.