Abstract:
Small and Medium-scale Enterprises (SMEs) led by women play a pivotal role in the
developing economies. Nonetheless, extant research evince that Asian women-led
SMEs and/or women entrepreneurs are still not performing up to their full potential. A
range of factors, including institutional environmental forces, play a key role in
impeding or expediting the success of women-led SMEs all over the globe. However,
Asia shows a unique case due to its inherent socio-cultural, politico-legal and
economic conditions those directly affecting the women, their career, and the business
environment which are different to the other parts of the globe. Consequently, the
macro environmental circumstances those affecting women-led SMEs in the Asian
region deserve special scholarly attention. Despite the attempts to unveil institutional
influences on SMEs in general, there is a dearth of studies those specifically examined
the effects of institutional environment on women-led SMEs. Drawing from the
institutional theory, and referring to the existing literature, this study examines the
regulatory, cognitive, and normative effects of institutional environment on womenled
SMEs. This is a conceptual paper which abstracts a coherent picture of three-fold
institutional dimensions activated in the Asia and their effects on women‘s business.
The implications are drawn for policy makers and future researchers.