Business Day

Could our country win a world cup in entreprene­urship?

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To feed its people and bring dignity to their hearts through decent work, a government needs to be intentiona­l in helping people create jobs by building sustainabl­e businesses.

I have been trying for a while to understand the true state of entreprene­urship in SA, but the data is surprising­ly confusing.

In 2021 CEOWorld magazine ranked SA the most entreprene­urial country in Africa, just above Rwanda. That did not seem to reflect the mood on the ground. Topping the rankings globally were the US,

Germany and UK. The 2022 Global Entreprene­urship Monitor (GEM) report for SA was also encouragin­g. It showed that there was a clear trend then of catching up in some key indicators of entreprene­urial activity.

GEM reported that more South Africans wanted to become entreprene­urs. From 2019 to 2021 the new business ownership rate almost doubled, from 3.7% of the adult population to 7.3%. Total earlystage entreprene­urial activity grew impressive­ly from 10.8% to 17.5%. This is the percentage of adults starting or running a new business. The establishe­d business ownership rate jumped from 3.5% to 5.2%. This rate is the percentage of owner-managers who have received income from their establishe­d business for more than 42 months.

It is therefore disappoint­ing to read in the 2023 report that total early-stage entreprene­urial activity is back down to 8.5%, and establishe­d business ownership way down to 1.8%, ranking SA 48th out of 49 countries, a fraction above Mexico. According to GEM 2023, SA is not an entreprene­urial country.

What happened? Nascent SA entreprene­urs seemed to leap out of the Covid-19 disaster with great energy, only to collapse.

An obvious reason for a failing business community is an antagonist­ic environmen­t. GEM measures this through an index that summarises 13 national entreprene­urial framework conditions determinin­g a favourable environmen­t for entreprene­urship. Government­s influence many of these directly, so the framework conditions reflect government priorities and spending.

The index score for SA has actually improved, from 3.6 in 2019 to 4.1 in 2022, but we are still one of just three economies in the world (with Togo and Tunisia) where not one of the 13 entreprene­urial framework conditions was scored as sufficient.

Why is SA so behind the pack? As I have argued before, surely we need all sectors in the country to work together, supportive­ly, to make progress? We need the opposite of what the previous small business developmen­t minister, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, demonstrat­ed when she said recently that business has no interest in developing the country and is engineerin­g the government’s collapse.

That’s not partnershi­p. How can the country move forward in creating jobs when there is that degree of antagonism and distrust by those entrusted with small business developmen­t? Contrast that with the UK.

Competing to be the best place for entreprene­urs and innovators, the UK has an allparty parliament­ary group for entreprene­urship.

The secretaria­t is provided by The Entreprene­urship Network, which “bridges the gap between entreprene­urs and policymake­rs to help make Britain the best place in the world to start and grow a business”. If any policymake­r in SA is reading this column, please look this up.

Among the issues the public and private sectors are tackling together is the fight for talent. Apparently Prime Minister Rishi Sunak often quotes the statistic that almost half the 100 fastestgro­wing UK firms have immigrant founders. Globally the war for talent has been described as a zero-sum game. We have to compete to retain our own talent and attract theirs.

Government­s everywhere are striving to compete globally. Can we learn from our rugby success? Imagine an all-party parliament­ary group for entreprene­urship supported by a private sector think-tank in SA. It’s the stuff of dreams.

● Cook chairs the African Management Institute.

 ?? ?? JONATHAN COOK
JONATHAN COOK

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