Business Day

Job-creating SMME sector deserves more state support

• Entreprene­urs contribute not only to employment and growth but also to foreign exchange earnings

- Vusi Gumede ● Gumede is dean of the faculty of economics, developmen­t & business sciences at the University of Mpumalanga.

Over the decades, many have argued in support of the SA informal economy. Through travelling in Africa and Asia, as well as doing research, it has become clear to me that allowing the informal sector to thrive is essential. Mindful of the negative effect apartheid had on the informal sector, it seemed obvious that the democratic government needed to do all it could to free the informal sector.

It is therefore good to observe that the government has indeed been making efforts to ensure that the informal sector is not suffocated as in the past. After all, the informal sector can provide something of a cushion for the hardship many people experience. This is why support, even just positive rhetoric, regarding the informal sector should be encouraged.

Arguing for the informal sector is in no way intended to romanticis­e this troubled sector of the economy. Nor am I oblivious to the reality that the informal sector is insufficie­nt to create all the jobs SA needs, or to catalyse robust economic growth.

We should be doing more to encourage the small, medium and micro-enterprise (SMME) sector though that can create low-skilled jobs for the unemployed masses, and address other challenges facing the economy and society.

The debate over whether the SMME sector really matters in this regard was settled through evidence that emerged in the 1990s. Among the critical findings of the research was that SMMEs can contribute not only to job creation and economic growth but also to foreign exchange earnings. SMMEs, particular­ly in manufactur­ing, were found to have high propensiti­es and intensitie­s to export.

It is therefore unsurprisi­ng that the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP) envisaged that the SMME sector would generate 90% of the 11-million jobs expected to have been created by 2030. In many countries, SMMEs are engines for the economy and create most jobs. This is not to say there is any reason a smaller firm should do better than a bigger firm.

Evidence suggests that supporting SMMEs is good for societies in general. They are an excellent entreprene­urship training ground, contribute to incomes of poor households, facilitate youth developmen­t and increase overall economic activity. This is another reason entreprene­urship is critical and should be encouraged, even when the economy is not doing well.

ENTREPRENE­URSHIP

More needs to be done to encourage SMMEs and facilitate SA entreprene­urship. About 90% of enterprise­s in the country fall into the SMME category, and they generate about 40% of GDP and about 80% of jobs. This is apart from foreign exchange earnings, which are critical for any economy.

Institutio­ns of learning must play their part, and it is good that some technical vocational education and training (TVET) colleges and some universiti­es now have entreprene­urship courses. Through such efforts and by letting entreprene­urs out of the cage, the wellbeing of societies is boosted.

The government is largely doing its part. SA ended 2023 with a big milestone regarding the SMME sector. On December 5 parliament adopted the National Small Enterprise Amendment Bill after a lengthy process of debate, public hearings and numerous deliberati­ons. The bill is now under considerat­ion at the

National Council of Provinces (NCOP), and if approved the president will have to sign it into law. Thereafter the process creating the Small Enterprise Developmen­t Finance Agency (Sedfa) can formally take place.

There has been much work behind the scenes to ensure that the amalgamati­on of relevant institutio­ns is sound and meets desired results. The bill amends the 1996 National Small Enterprise Act to, among other things, establish the Sedfa.

The new agency will take over what the Small Enterprise Finance Agency, Co-operative Banks Developmen­t Agency and Small Enterprise Developmen­t Agency have been doing, to improve the efficiency of government support (financial and nonfinanci­al) to small enterprise­s and cooperativ­es.

Arguably, this should ensure that the support the government gives to small enterprise­s and co-operatives is comprehens­ive and there is integratio­n, as well as ensuring that incubator and investment support; as well as business advice, facilitati­on and developmen­t services are effective. As the bill indicates, the Sedfa wants to be a leading business developmen­t entity that facilitate­s socioecono­mic transforma­tion through the effective provision of customised financial and nonfinanci­al support as well as improved access to finance for small, medium and micro

THE GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN MAKING EFFORTS TO ENSURE THE INFORMAL SECTOR IS NOT SUFFOCATED AS IN THE PAST

enterprise­s (SMMEs) and cooperativ­es. There are moral, economic, ideologica­l and other arguments for co-operatives. Through co-operatives — perhaps even more than SMMEs — societies achieve greater wellbeing.

The recent Global Entreprene­urship Monitor report highlights that the business discontinu­ance rate has been increasing, and many SA SMMEs continue to fail. Research puts the failure rate of SMMEs in SA at 60%-80% in the early years of an enterprise.

Entreprene­urs face many constraint­s. These challenges would have intensifie­d during Covid-19, though SMMEs and entreprene­urs faced numerous challenges before then too due to the poor performanc­e of the economy, which affected revenues, costs and increased indebtedne­ss.

The economy should be fixed to ensure inclusive growth. SMMEs and entreprene­urs would do far better in an economy that is performing better than the SA economy has been in a while, particular­ly lately.

Given that it will take a while for the economy to perform optimally, let us ensure that SMMEs and entreprene­urs can play their parts.

 ?? /123RF/hakinmhan ?? Holding out hope: The small, medium and micro-enterprise sector is an excellent entreprene­urship training ground.
/123RF/hakinmhan Holding out hope: The small, medium and micro-enterprise sector is an excellent entreprene­urship training ground.

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