The topic focuses on the tension between SMEs’ growth and sustainability in emerging and developed Countries’ Internationalization: and presents a conceptual model of this process Econoconomic growth is a priority in many developing countries in the drive to eradicate inequality and poverty, but elevated levels of economic growth are regarded as inimical to climate preservation and sustainability. The continuing depletion of natural resources and industrial pollution has led to increasing global pressure and government policies aimed at reducing climate deterioration. Advocates of ’strong sustainability’ are concentrated in the economically developed world, while developing countries have a greater need for economic growth and advocate weaker forms of sustainability where economic development, the promotion of employment and eradication of poverty take precedence over climate preservation concerns. Extant internationalization literature does not provide an integrated model of sustainable internationalization. (i.e., the relative emphasis of human and natural capital in contextual and universal factors in the internationalization process of developing and developed countries).To address this underexplored research gap a cross-sectional, non-probabilistic convenience sample of South African SMEs using a mixed methods approach, and a secondary data eclectic analysis of developed and developing countries’ SME internationalization using a comparative multiple-case design, were adopted in this study.
“Much of the confusion in the discussion of strong sustainability arises from a failure to distinguish between the two assumptions dividing weak and strong sustainability. The first is the assumption of substitutability between natural and manufactured capital. The second is that economic well-being “covers” all other concerns. If the second assumption is accepted (as it sometimes is by advocates of strong sustainability) then the argument about substitutability boils down to a purely economic debate about elasticities of substitution, technological advancement and so on. If, on the other hand, substituting financial capital for natural resources is incompatible with maintaining a suitable physical environment for the human species, then strong sustainability implies that we must step outside the conventional market framework to establish the conditions for maintaining human happiness.”Thus, ‘strong sustainability’ is eco-centric in orientation and advocates that there is a non-negotiable element that aims to ensure that the natural environment remains suitable for the existence of human life and the maintenance of flora and fauna [9]. Weak sustainability can be defined as an overriding concern to increase manufactured capital despite the destruction of natural environmental resources that this might cause. An often-cited example of the implications of weak sustainability suffering from an anthropocentric focus on unbridled growth via economic capital is that of the catastrophic effects of a policy implemented on the small Pacific Island of Nauru [12]. In 1900, one of the world’s richest deposits of phosphate was found on the island of Nauru but after extensive mining for ninety years, the island is now desolate. Initially, the emphasis on natural resource exploitation above any other consideration reaped anthropocentric benefits for the islanders in the form of high per capita incomes. A trust fund from the income from phosphate sales was built for the islanders and accumulated a net worth of approximately USD 1 billion, Interest from the trust should have allowed a secure and sustainable income for all the island’s inhabitants, but the Asian financial crisis wiped out the value of the fund and the islanders have been left with a desolate and biologically impoverished environment that may never fully recover. The experience of Nauru clearly indicates that a weak sustainability policy with an extreme anthropocentric focus is likely to create utter environmental devastation over time. What the Nauru example clearly indicates is that the substitution of natural resources for manufactured capital may constitute a ‘one way’ street. Once a natural resource has been ruthlessly exploited for manufactured capital, there may be no coming back [12]. Strong sustainability is defined by Brekke [13] as ‘non-diminishing life opportunities’ that “… should be achieved by conserving the stock of human capital, technological capability, natural resources and environmental quality”. Strong sustainability aims to ensure that viable amounts of natural, economic, and social capital should be maintained as natural resources are essential for economic capital production and human wellbeing and cannot be fully substituted. Additionally, strong sustainability can be justified in ethical-legal terms since nature has its own right to exist and prosper and that some flora and fauna are unique, since their loss is can be made irreversible through extinction. Extreme forms of strong sustainability maintain that all components of the natural environment must be preserved undiminished and uncontaminated by human and/or the production of economic capital [14]. This ‘Deep Ecology’ extreme view is untenable on the grounds that human life needs to utilize natural capital to survive, natural resources are themselves in a state of constant fluctuation through continuous evolution, and the rights of nature need to be considered and balanced with human rights [14]. Thus, a compromise in strong sustainability needs to be created that focuses on the use of natural resources to sustain human wellbeing including that which is needed for economic capital production within sustainably defined limits, and unique and irreplaceable biological assets [14]. In the SME internationalization process, sustainability can be seen as a movement from a ‘weak’ sustainability emphasising local contextual economic factors, or factors focused largely on short-term economic viability, to a ‘strong’ sustainability emphasis focused on universal factors shared by trading partners that include economic, social, and environmental concerns. A good example of this is presented by the new US trade initiative to generate sustainable trade practices between the US and China that play ‘by the rules of the road’ as internationally defined [15]. In effect, this means that the SMEs of emerging countries should move away from a contextual ‘my way’ of internationalization to embrace an economic (weak sustainability) emphasis to a more universalized, and integrated (economically, socially, and environmentally) ‘our way’ of internationalization based on strong sustainability. Thus, since emerging markets such as South Africa need a sustainable and integrated trade that combines economic growth with the preservation of scarce natural resources to avoid irreversible environmental damage [16], investigations into South Africa’s SMEs progress towards sustainable internationalization are vital. Such information will inform government and institutional policy decision makers to motivate for integrated, sustainable trade conditions in their country and help SMEs on their path towards strong sustainable internationalization.
Primary data methods consisted of a cross-sectional mixed-methods small sample survey of South African SMEs which presented a developing country ‘case study’ as an example of internationalization was combined with a comparative case study design using eclectic secondary data examples of the internationalization process in developing and developed countries The comparative multiple case analysis eclectically selected recent examples of contextual and universal factors in the internationalization process. The eclectic secondary data approach adopted in the current study is a comparative multiple case design rather than a comparative multiple case study design as such, although it closely corresponds to latter [17].
Primary data was obtained from a sample (N = 318) of Johannesburg and Pretoria-based SMEs and was non-randomly selected from the population of South African registered SMEs (N= ± 5000). .A Qualtrics mixed methods questionnaire was sent out to potential sample respondents in December 2021 with a follow-up in January 2022 because of the poor initial response to the questionnaire. The 33 responses obtained during the cut-off time period constituted a 10% response rate of the selected sample with Gauteng Province, which provided the source of the study’s sample accounting for approximately 34% of SMMEs in South Africa as a whole. The small sample of responses is within the minimum parameters suggested by Cohen et al. [18], and Kwam and Vidakovic, [19] for quantitative relational research. The small sample obtained is also considered acceptable for qualitative grounded research [20].
The primary data results of South African SMEs’ internationalization used as a local example of this process in a developing country indicate clearly that the initial drive for internationalization largely rests on contextual factors that focus on localized ‘my way’ aspects of immediate, anthropocentric economic viability such as opportunities for growth [21], potential demand for goods/service in the foreign locality, profit and business expansion, and local contextual factors that impede the process. Few if any universal sustainable ‘our way’ factors that aim to balance economic growth with environmental preservation in the internationalization process are evident. It is also clear that the current study’s South African SME data suggest a gradual rather than quick internationalization process [22].
The eclectic secondary data comparative case analysis indicates a tendency among developing countries to shift their emphasis on critically influential factors in their extension, penetration, and integration internationalized processes, from contextual ‘my way’ towards more universal ‘our way’ criteria. There also appeared to be a clear indication of a shift from mainly ‘my way’ economic contextual (weak sustainability) considerations of the internationalization of developing countries’ SMEs in the penetration phase to a more universal ‘our way’ strong sustainability emphasis on economic, social and environmental factors in the integration phase.
Figure 1 below gives a diagrammatic representation of the model of internationalization tentatively derived from the anaforegoing data and analysis. The model outlines the relative importance of contextual vis-à-vis universal factors for sustainable SME internationalization.
Figure 1: A heuristic model of the relative importance of contextual vis-à-vis universal factors in the sustainability of SMEs’ internationalization process over time.
The tentative model displayed in Figure 1 suggests indeterminate time phases (t1, t2, and tn) in each stage of internationalization as the firm moves through the three stages of the internationalization process: extension, penetration, and integration [1]—corresponding to a gradual movement from weak to strong sustainability [14][23][24]. The model also suggests in the downward sloping curve in the diagram that the internationalization process moves towards an integration phase of strong sustainability [14][23] and integrated trade [1]. Figure 1 also suggests that contextual factors (other than those that may provide a competitive advantage to a specific country and are compatible with principles of strong sustainability) diminish in importance and universal factors become increasingly influential in the successful outcome of sustainable internationalization [1][14][23][24]. The empirical primary data obtained from the mixed methods survey of South African SMEs lend support to the model and show that contextual factors are more influential than universal ones in the extension phase of internationalization and tend to be focused on human capital growth.
Stage models have tended to be purely descriptive, describing the stages that the internationalization process undergoes in the development of integrated trade between countries. However, developing countries such as South Africa—where SMEs play a pivotal and growing role [16][25][26]—require more prescriptive models of the internationalization process that may allow prescriptive steps to ensure, as far as possible, that the internationalization process ends in sustainable success. The contextual–universal time-phased model developed in Fthigure 1s entry suggests that SMEs in developing countries should try to generate universal features in their trade environment that promote an ‘our way’ focus and emphasize strong sustainability aspects as early as possible without impeding their initial primary function of generating rapid economic growth.