scholarly journals The Effect of Capital Structure Gearing Levels on Financial Performance of Public and Private Sector Firms in Kenya’s Coastal Counties

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 99
Author(s):  
Swalhah Ibrahim Yusuf

Soon after independence in 1963, many firms including those in productive public and private sectors were set up in Kenya to produce goods and services for consumption in Kenya and beyond. Some public and private firms were set up in Kenya’s coastal counties while some were set up in other parts of Kenya. As at June 1990 however, most of these firms were either collapsed and liquidated or were ailing. Few were performing fairly. By 2015, there were 194 public firms which were in operations. Many of these however were formed after 1990. 46.4% of these had poor financial performance as measured by accounting and market ratios (ROE and ROA). About 35 of these firms, among them sugar firms and local authorities had more operating expenses than revenue. Postal Corporation of Kenya for example made KES 2.6b in revenues. Operating expenses however were KES 4.16b. National Oil Corporation of Kenya (NOCK) made KES 24.76b in revenues. Cost of sales excluding operating expenses however were KES 22.95b (Kenya’s treasury department, statement, 2015). In the small enterprise segment, about 300,000 SME’s were set up in 2010. About 350,000 SME’s were set up in 2012. However 2.2m SME’s closed down in six years ending 2015. About 35% of these closed down in 2015. Overall, about 96% of the firms which are set up closed down by the end of their first year in operations. (World Bank Report, 2010). The questions were ‘why did firms underperform and why did these firms fail?’ Published annual financial reports of firms, studies by Kenya National Bureau of Statistic (KNBS) and others attributed the poor financial performance and failure of the firms to many factors; high cost of energy, intense competition, high cost of raw materials, obsolete equipment, poor management, poor technical skills, high cost of finance and other bank charges, inadequate finance, family feuds, lack of succession plan etc. Some empirical studies attributed poor financial performance and failure of firms to financing; the capital structure. None however attributed this to capital structure gearing levels. This constituted a research gap to be filled by this study to add to the body of knowledge and literature. The capital structure gearing level is the proportion of external finance used in financing a firm. This proportion (gearing) may vary between ›0 to 100% (Brealey & Myers, 1991). Some firms however have a proportion ranging between ›0 and <30% (LG), 30%-‹35% (MG1) ≥35%-‹40% (MG2) ≥40%-≤60% (MG3) and ›60% (HG). The external finance may be inform of short term and long term debt and equity finance. Debt carries a fixed slice of earnings. The gearing levels therefore debt levels will carry a proportionate fixed slice of earnings. High gearing (HG) will magnify the effect on earnings and hasten the process of insolvency (Brealey & Myers, 1991). Poor financial performance and failure therefore maybe the result of inappropriate gearing level. Gearing level therefore was the problem. This study sought to do the following: Assess the capital structure of public and the private sector firms in Kenya’s coastal counties. Assess the capital structure gearing levels of public and private sector firms in Kenya’s coastal counties. Determine the effect of the capital structure gearing levels on financial performance of public and private sector firms in Kenya’s coastal counties. This involved a target population of 500 productive firms in Kenya’s Coastal Counties. Using the Cochran’s sample size formula, 50% proportion of the productive public and private sector firms randomly selected, the sample was 139 firms. They were observed for a period of 2003 to 2015. Questionnaires and structured interviews were used as instruments for collecting primary data from finance officers or finance managers or their equivalent of the firms. Secondary data was obtained from financial statements (income statement and the balance sheet). Control variables were; size, tangibility and growth. The basic framework for regression was of the form below; Y= f (gearing levels+ tangibility+ size+ growth) Where, Y= return on assets/return on equity ROA/ROE=f (gearing levels+ tangibility+ size+ growth) Data analysis was done using both descriptive statistics and inferential statistics (regression).

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Dr. Naila Afzal Ashraf ◽  
Sana Sahar

BACKGROUND Stress may lead to hypertension, tachycardia and hormonal variations; it has both positive and negative effects on human body to cope up with the destructive responses of distress that alters the internal and external environment of the body OBJECTIVES To assess the prevalence of stress among the undergraduate DPT students of private and public sector universities of Karachi Pakistan. METHODOLOGY A cross-sectional survey was conducted among the undergraduate Doctor of Physical Therapy students of public and private sector universities. Random sampling technique was used for enrolment of participants. The data was collected from 318 students through Student Stress Inventory (SSI) tool and analyzed on SPSS version 20. RESULTS The prevalence of stress among the participants was 11.5% from Karachi University, 55.0 % from Ziauddin University and 33.3% from JPMC. Total participants included were 261 females and 51 males. Around 53.8% were suffering from moderate stress, 25.8% with mild stress. Moreover public and private sector stress level lie at moderate category CONCLUSION The study revealed that moderate level of stress was found among the majority of undergraduate DPT students. The stress level in private sector is calculated as 55.0 % where as 44.9% is found in public sector.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-26
Author(s):  
Meral Farooq ◽  
Nazia Talib

This paper examined the influence of personality related factors pertinent to perceived behavioral control in the context of theory of planned behavior.  Moreover, a comparative analysis was executed to see the variance in the effect of the selected factors with respect to sector of employment in Pakistan. Offline and online survey data was collected from multiple cities across Pakistan using purposive and convenience sampling technique. Regression analysis was run to analyze the data. The findings revealed that the degree of creativity influencing hybrid entrepreneurial intentions varies between public and private sector employees in Pakistan. However, Self-efficacy impacts such intentions approximately in the similar manner in the two sectors of employment.  The findings highlight interesting area where public organizations lack as compared to private organizations in terms of creativity of employees. This study extends the body of knowledge on hybrid entrepreneurship in Pakistani settings. This research is among the initial endeavors which undertake a comparative analysis of public and private sector employees towards their hybrid entrepreneurial intentions.


The seemingly untamable Non-Performing Assets are leading the Indian banks towards a highly unstable environment. The financial soundness of the banks is mandatory for any economy considering it is one of the most significant and a pre-requisite of a stable economy. The present study examines the financial performance parameters of banks with a probable variation among public and private sector banks for a period between 2005 and 2018. The study is divided into three sections. The first section studies the financial performance of the Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs), Public & Private Sector Banks in three identified time bands of last thirteen years. The second section assesses the probable variation in asset quality among Private and Public Sector Banks through statistical inferences. The third section finally examines the probability of variations in asset quality in the three time bands identified in the study. The study concludes a very high volatility among the SCBs during the said period and found Private Sector Banks to be more consistent and bore better stability parameters compared to Public Sector Banks. The statistically inferred results through T-test, Welch test and Post-Hoc test support a significant variation among both the sectors along with presence of significant variations in asset quality.


CAMEL model analysis is an important tool to analyse the banks’ and financial institutions’ performance and to suggest the necessary measures for its improvement where it is required. In the present study, Indian banks- five public and five private sector banks based on its total assets have been considered. This study is taken up for the five year period from 2012-17. The present study analyses the financial performance of the select banks. Five parameters of CAMEL- Capital Adequacy, Asset Quality, Management Efficiency, Earnings Ability and Liquidity are considered to rank the banks on its performance. The study found that Kotak Mahindra has performed better and ranked first among all the banks and Punjab National bank ranked the least position. Among all, private sector banks have outperformed compared to public sector banks. The top five positions are of private sector banks and Bank of Baroda being public sector bank ranked top third with HDFC bank.


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