SWAZILAND: Focus on the informal business sector

UNITED NATIONS

Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

MBABANE 17 September (IRIN) - The informal business sector, usually  dismissed by economic planners and their balance sheets, is taking on  increasing importance in Swaziland as the government struggles to battle  poverty and unemployment.

Street vendors of fruits and used clothes, hair cutters working under trees  in city parks, and boys washing cars at stream beds - people at the margins  of the economy - are now being taken seriously as a route for semi-skilled  workers to become entrepreneurs. Every micro-project has the potential to  be an embryonic formal sector business, is the dawning realisation.

"Formal sector employment recorded only 749 additional jobs to the  country's 93,962 jobs in 2001, which is low even for a small economy like  Swaziland," a statistician with the Central Bank told IRIN. "But the  informal sector's ability to create jobs is limitless."

The proliferation of street hawkers in Manzini, the country's commercial  centre, has grown from a dozen vendors 10 years ago to hundreds today.  Mostly women, they spread wares from mangoes to alarm clocks on sidewalk  pavements beneath colourful awnings of translucent plastic. Earnings in the  informal sector are low, but rent and other overhead expenses are  nonexistent. In a land where two-thirds of the population live below the  poverty line, any activity that generates income is embraced.

Unemployment stands at 40 percent in Swaziland, according to the Ministry  of Economic Planning and Development. While concerted efforts to lure  foreign investment to the kingdom has resulted in new factories that have  reduced the unemployment figure from last year's historic high of 45  percent, for many Swazis the desire for a job cannot be met by limited  opportunities in the formal sector.

"You have to be self-reliant," said Thuli Ndsinisa, who sells cookware at  Manzini market, where vendors are required to pay monthly rental for stalls  whose address is considered more up-scale than the city pavements.

Her husband, Jabulani Ndsinisa, makes the cookware at the market, cutting,  bending and pounding sheets of thin galvanized iron into pots, washtubs,  and chimneys. He says these goods are always in demand, but the big chain  stores and supermarkets in town do not handle such merchandise. "I could  make more money if I could hire assistants, and find a workshop," Jabulani  said.

Toward that end, the European Union this week dispersed nearly US $300,000  in grant money for micro projects approved by the Ministry of Economic  Planning and Development.

The ministry's principal secretary, Ephraim Hlope, heads the technical  steering committee that approves projects that receive EU funding. "Small  entrepreneurs have come to us with ideas in agriculture, education and  rural electrification," Hlope said of projects that were found to dovetail  into national development needs in those sectors. "Ten schools were  allotted funds for education-oriented projects that will train the  entrepreneurs of tomorrow."

But not everyone agrees that the informal sector is the answer to high  unemployment or poverty eradication. Jan Sithole, the secretary-general of  the Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions, told IRIN: "The money people can  earn is not much at all, and of course there are no benefit packages that  come with such work. It is not a replacement for formal sector employment."

Nevertheless, the workers federation took up the cause of street vendors  seven years ago. The security of those workers was attached to a list of  social and economic reforms presented to government as the "27 Workers  Demands". At the time, city council rangers physically routed women  vendors from the pavements, and confiscated their wares. While such raids  still occur, they are rare, and most vendors have been given corners at  Manzini and Mbabane intersections where foot traffic volumes are high.

"Informal sector growth has been hampered by a lack of capitalisation,"  said business writer, Titus Shabangu. "There are a lot of home owners who  cannot use their property for collateral because 80 percent of Swazis live  on chiefs' land, which is communal, and they don't own title deed to the  land. All the people who live in the township slums don't have any property  at all to get started."

Swazis are encouraged to create micro projects that can become businesses.  Lending to micro projects has become a preferred form of donor assistance  because they can spread funding among many more people, and less risk is  involved because the sums are small. With grants come technical support to  ensure that a project works.

Some NGOs that arrange funding for micro projects use these businesses to  promote social welfare efforts. In Manzini, Bomake Wabomake has as its  agenda the empowerment of Swazi women. The micro projects include women's  cooperatives that raise poultry, sew garments, and cultivate vegetables.  The payback rate for its loans has been an impressive 97 percent.

The government's National Emergency Response Committee for HIV and AIDS,  gives grants to projects that address the AIDS epidemic in the country,  while providing jobs and needed community services. These include  agricultural schemes for rural areas that give income-earning opportunities  to people who are HIV-positive or who have AIDS but cannot work regularly,  and town hospices and orphan facilities requiring staff.

Most small business grants dealing with AIDS in towns are provided by the  Alliance of Mayor's Initiative for Community Action against AIDS at the  Local Level (AMICAALL). The mayors of Swaziland's 11 towns and cities have  AMICAALL community coordinators attached to their municipal staff to  consider business projects, and to assist entrepreneurs with funding  applications.

Nkululeko Simelane, 22, carves figurines from wood he gathers in the hills,  and sells his wares at the roadside for tourists. He has been doing this  for five years, without the assistance of grants. "I have never looked for  a job working for anyone. You hardly ever see a Swazi boss in the stores and factories. But here I am my own boss. I get an idea, and I go with it." 

 

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