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Informal business can beef up economy

Strategic policy crucial
Policies should focus on investing human capital in the informal sector, as this will encourage innovation and thus promote industrialisation and furthering economic growth, says independent economist Josef Sheehama.
The Namibia economy is mostly dominated by the informal sector, and the majority of the population is employed in this sector at approximately 60% of total employment. The sector is confirmed as a major source of employment.

It was interesting to conduct mini research in informal sectors in Windhoek, Rehoboth, Mariental, Otavi, Okahandja, Otjiwarongo, Tsumeb, Omuthiya, Ondangwa, Oshakati, Oshikango, Rundu and Walvis Bay respectively.

The consolidated research revealed that about 57% of the participants are selling fruit and vegetables, kapana, including “eedingu” (dry meat), and old clothes among other things.

In addition, 60% of the participants are ready to get their businesses registered, but funding is a problem. Some 25% of the participants are trading without business names.

About 45% of the participants stated that they are not aware of the Business and Intellectual Property Authority (Bipa).



Bookkeeping

Close to 90% of informal traders do not keep their books in good standing and some do not even have bookkeepers. In the absence of proper bookkeeping procedures, it can be difficult for anyone to tell whether a business is making a profit or not.

In Namibia we have tertiary institutions that offer training programmes in entrepreneurship for the citizens.

Open space is utilised by participants, however, Tsumeb constructed open markets, which are not yet occupied.

This mini-research work is undertaken in order to fill the knowledge gap in areas of people and place relationships, where improvements are needed to overcome challenges in the provision of facilities, design and planning.

It is therefore recommended that appropriate mechanisms should be put in place towards improving the quality of the open markets to further enhance user interaction cum the sustainability of the community in Namibia.



Policy responses

The growing informal sector accentuates the need for strategic and appropriate policy responses.

However, to address informality, one must first understand it as well as the factors driving it.

It is possible for Namibia to attain Vision 2030 if policymakers craft a clear understanding to facilitate the informal to graduate to the formal sector.

At the same time, there are many factors that influence a business’ decision to formalise. These range from internal factors, such as individual business purpose and characteristics, to external factors, including market conditions, costs of doing business, and business cultures and relationships.

Government interventions that aim to formalise businesses should be guided by the cost-benefit analysis of formalisation trade-offs, drawing from a clear understanding of where the prominent weaknesses lie that would curtail movement toward formalisation and maximisation of the benefits generated from an intervention.

Furthermore, the attainment of Vision 2030 depends on the ability to formulate policies as a driving vehicle to upgrade the open markets.



Research, reason

The policymakers should work together and inspire action to meet Namibia’s commitment to leave no one behind throughout its implementation of the Sixth National Development Plan (NDP6).

It is imperative to reflect on the previous NDPs’ shortcomings by coming up with well-researched and well-reasoned mechanisms that prioritise and synchronise activities to yield the desired results and avoid the economy faltering.

The NDP6 could use the flexibility inherent to the informal sector to integrate into the formal sector of economics such as economic diversification, industrialisation, sustainable economic growth, investment, and social concerns such as inequality, poverty and well-being.

Linking informal targets and NDPs can provide a basis for inter-sectoral partnership during implementation. It is possible that the informal traders can be graduated into the formal economy if we work together with common goals to attain Vision 2030.



Mind-shift

Additionally, the reality for Namibia, however, is that we lack the capacity and resources to provide extensive economic analysis across a fully open market or we are challenged to make decisions based on best information.

Thus, there is a need for mind-shift.

We should look at our failure as a necessary stepping stone to achieve our desired goals and not as a deterrent not to try again.

On our journey the real solutions can therefore not come from the pessimists among us, but from those that are prepared to face the uncertainty of the future and willing to overcome the fear of failure.

The industrial policy should be revisited or reformed to incorporate the informal economy.

The current industrial policy narratives tend to either neglect the informal economy or even view the informal sector as potentially threatening to the formal economy, needing elimination and control rather than support and investment for inclusive structural economic transformation.

This narrative still views the informal economy as outside formal arrangements, and often found on the edge of high vulnerability to poverty, low earnings, irregular incomes, and bad working conditions.

Therefore, recognising the precarious nature of the informal economy has also brought marked attention to the resilience of the informal economy and its creative energies to not only cope and adapt to change, but also it is potential as an untapped engine of innovation and growth that is worthy of policy attention, investment, and support towards inclusive structural transformations and pathways to formality.



Jobs

Moreover, the informal sector in Namibia is a significant sector that has helped to absorb unemployment in the labour market.

Given the role of the informal sector, in the economy, the government should look at the informal sector with a view of enacting policies that will synergise the informal and formal sectors in order to unleash the vast potential of the economy since activities in both sectors of the economy are not mutually exclusive.

A massive drive to register and have a database of all businesses in the informal sector can also be carried out to ascertain the number and needs of the operators in the informal sector.

The informal economy is associated with two major aspects, one is the growth of the economy and the other is related to poverty and inequality.

Most people prefer to get into the sector because it became an avenue for their survival. The most informal economy workers in this country are youth, the population majorly affected by our country's unemployment rate.

To that end, the policies on the sector should focus on investing human capital in the informal sector for this will encourage innovation and thus promote industrialisation and furthering economic growth.

Policies should therefore focus on formalising the informal sector for this will address all the challenges faced by the sector.

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Allgemeine Zeitung 2024-11-24

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