Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy

Abstract Sustainable investment practices are increasingly recognized globally, yet their uptake among Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in developing economies is insufficiently understood. This study investigates the factors influencing sustainable investment decision-making among 372 SMEs in Ka...

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Main Authors: Dedrix Stephenson Bindeeba, Eddy Kurobuza Tukamushaba, Rennie Bakashaba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-07-01
Series:Future Business Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00598-4
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author Dedrix Stephenson Bindeeba
Eddy Kurobuza Tukamushaba
Rennie Bakashaba
author_facet Dedrix Stephenson Bindeeba
Eddy Kurobuza Tukamushaba
Rennie Bakashaba
author_sort Dedrix Stephenson Bindeeba
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Sustainable investment practices are increasingly recognized globally, yet their uptake among Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in developing economies is insufficiently understood. This study investigates the factors influencing sustainable investment decision-making among 372 SMEs in Kampala and Wakiso, Uganda. Data were collected using convenience sampling through a mixed-mode questionnaire administered via face-to-face interviews and online forms. Integrating Institutional Theory, Resource-Based View, and the Theory of Planned Behavior, the research examines how environmental risk exposure, perceived regulatory clarity, government incentives, technological capability, financial access, competitive pressure, and business network strength shape the perceived value of sustainable investment. Employing covariance-based structural equation modeling, the study tests both direct and mediated effects. Results reveal that environmental risk negatively influences perceived value, while technological capability, financial access, network strength, and competitive pressure positively influence it. In contrast, perceptions of regulatory strength and government support do not exhibit significant effects, likely due to low enforcement and institutional trust. The perceived value of sustainable investment strongly predicts actual sustainability-oriented investments, confirming its mediating role. These findings offer practical insights for policymakers and development actors seeking to foster sustainable transitions in resource-constrained environments.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2314-7210
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
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series Future Business Journal
spelling doaj-art-c8ff75a67d8247d380c7af3b056c36f02025-08-20T03:43:26ZengSpringerOpenFuture Business Journal2314-72102025-07-0111112010.1186/s43093-025-00598-4Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economyDedrix Stephenson Bindeeba0Eddy Kurobuza Tukamushaba1Rennie Bakashaba2 Fuculty of Business and Management Sciences , Mbarara University of Science and TechnologyUniversity of Doha for Science and Technology, Doha, Qatar Fuculty of Business and Management Sciences , Mbarara University of Science and TechnologyAbstract Sustainable investment practices are increasingly recognized globally, yet their uptake among Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in developing economies is insufficiently understood. This study investigates the factors influencing sustainable investment decision-making among 372 SMEs in Kampala and Wakiso, Uganda. Data were collected using convenience sampling through a mixed-mode questionnaire administered via face-to-face interviews and online forms. Integrating Institutional Theory, Resource-Based View, and the Theory of Planned Behavior, the research examines how environmental risk exposure, perceived regulatory clarity, government incentives, technological capability, financial access, competitive pressure, and business network strength shape the perceived value of sustainable investment. Employing covariance-based structural equation modeling, the study tests both direct and mediated effects. Results reveal that environmental risk negatively influences perceived value, while technological capability, financial access, network strength, and competitive pressure positively influence it. In contrast, perceptions of regulatory strength and government support do not exhibit significant effects, likely due to low enforcement and institutional trust. The perceived value of sustainable investment strongly predicts actual sustainability-oriented investments, confirming its mediating role. These findings offer practical insights for policymakers and development actors seeking to foster sustainable transitions in resource-constrained environments.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00598-4Sustainable investmentSMEsDeveloping economiesInstitutional theoryResource-based viewDecision-making
spellingShingle Dedrix Stephenson Bindeeba
Eddy Kurobuza Tukamushaba
Rennie Bakashaba
Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
Future Business Journal
Sustainable investment
SMEs
Developing economies
Institutional theory
Resource-based view
Decision-making
title Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
title_full Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
title_fullStr Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
title_full_unstemmed Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
title_short Toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision-making in SMEs: a structural approach in a developing economy
title_sort toward a holistic model of sustainable investment decision making in smes a structural approach in a developing economy
topic Sustainable investment
SMEs
Developing economies
Institutional theory
Resource-based view
Decision-making
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00598-4
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AT eddykurobuzatukamushaba towardaholisticmodelofsustainableinvestmentdecisionmakinginsmesastructuralapproachinadevelopingeconomy
AT renniebakashaba towardaholisticmodelofsustainableinvestmentdecisionmakinginsmesastructuralapproachinadevelopingeconomy