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OECD SME and Entrepreneurship Outlook 2023

image of OECD SME and Entrepreneurship Outlook 2023

Over the past few years, the global economy has suffered profound shocks that have had a marked impact on small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and entrepreneurs. While government support protected SMEs from the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, new threats have emerged. Rising geopolitical tensions and global financial risks, high inflation, tightening monetary and fiscal policies, labour shortages, high trade barriers and slowing integration into global value chains all contribute to a more challenging business environment for SMEs. Meanwhile, there is an urgent need to accelerate the contribution of SMEs and entrepreneurship to the green and digital transitions and help them navigate a changing international trade and investment landscape. Against this background, the OECD SME and Entrepreneurship Outlook 2023 provides new evidence on recent trends in SME performance, changing business conditions, and policy implications. It reflects on the broad underlying theme of SME integration into a series of networks, including global production and supply-chain networks and the role of women led-businesses in international trade, knowledge and innovation networks, and skill ecosystems, as well as the main policies in place to ensure SMEs can integrate these networks and benefit from the ongoing transformations they go through. The report also contains statistical country profiles that benchmark the 38 OECD across a set of indicators.

English Also available in: French

The role of networks for SME innovation, resilience and sustainability

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are particularly dependent from external networks to access strategic resources, such as knowledge, technology, finance or skills, and to innovate and grow. Networks are also a source of resilience and sustainability. They can take different forms beyond buyer-supplier relationships, reflecting the linkages SMEs develop with their ecosystem through exchanges of products, services, assets, or through open innovation and collaboration. Such networks encompass production networks, knowledge and innovation networks (involving universities and providers of knowledge-intensive business service), and strategic partnerships. Clusters are often needed to create proximity and agglomeration benefits. Digital platforms and technologies are instrumental for knowledge transfer and network effects. This chapter discusses SMEs’ ability to join innovation and growth networks and to take advantage of them. It presents an overview of the wide range of policy measures to support SME network expansion, and it introduces the following thematic chapters of the report.

English Also available in: French

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