Capital‑Light Entrepreneurship in Rwanda: A Scoping Review of Low-Capital Business Opportunities

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Abstract

Purpose: This study interrogates Rwanda’s persistent finance gap by systematically identifying business models that tertiary-educated youth and professionals can launch with negligible start-up cash. It clarifies which “business-with-no-capital” slogans hold empirical merit and how such ventures contribute to inclusive growth. Design/Methodology/Approach: A PRISMA-guided scoping review of 40 academic, policy and grey sources (2015–2025) mapped low-capital opportunities across all economic sectors. Each model was appraised through an Evidence-Weighted Feasibility Scoring framework covering regulatory complexity, skills intensity, time-to-first-revenue, market access, scalability and community value, yielding an integrative Feasibility Matrix. Findings: Analysis reveals a diversified Capital-Light Opportunity Architecture in Rwanda. Highest-feasibility pathways cluster in (i) digital freelancing and micro-consulting, (ii) commission-based agency and dropship commerce, and (iii) agribusiness brokerage and clean-energy micro-distribution. These ventures generate revenue within days to weeks, demand modest upskilling rather than credit, and, when scaled, enhance financial inclusion, food systems efficiency and environmental health. Nonetheless, feasibility is sector-contingent: digital options scale fastest but require strong human capital, whereas agribusiness delivers deeper community impact at slower payback. Practical and Social Implications: The study offers policymakers an actionable Feasibility Matrix, risk-guardrail table and Impact Assessment Framework to inform streamlined formalisation, youth-targeted micro-grants, shared-asset hubs and anti-predatory market surveillance. Educators and incubators can embed the scoring tool to steer graduates toward evidence-backed, capital-light start-ups instead of speculative schemes. Originality/Value: By synthesising dispersed evidence into a transparent scoring rubric, the paper pioneers a rigorous yet practitioner-ready lens on ultra-lean entrepreneurship in low-income economies. It moves the discourse from inspirational anecdotes to data-driven guidance, aligning with Rwanda’s vision of a knowledge-based, job-creating economy.

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