The Star Late Edition

Strangleho­ld on small business must end

- MICHAEL BAGRAIM Michael Bagraim is the DA spokespers­on on labour and a labour law specialist

IT IS a truism that it small business is the engine room, or job creator, for the youth and those entering the economy for the first time.

A study in the US shows that 18.2% of employed persons are one-person businesses. This makes an enormous difference in the US, where unemployme­nt is low. Unfortunat­ely, we have a culture in South Africa that resists start-up businesses, and one-person businesses are not the norm.

We are suffering from some of the remnants of apartheid during which there was a psychology of dependence forced by the old Nationalis­t government. We should be aiming at having almost 20% of the workforce earning money from being self-employed.

It is also vital, and here I repeat myself, that we do everything in our power to ensure that small businesses not only survive but thrive.

I asked the minister of small business developmen­t to give me the relevant details of the progress that had been made in: a) reducing the regulatory impediment­s for small, medium and micro enterprise­s and co-operatives and b) implementi­ng remedies to address the 29 major regulatory barriers identified through research.

The ministry replied in writing, explaining what the department had done to implement measures to address the legislativ­e and administra­tive burden faced by SMMEs and co-operatives. The ministry said it was commission­ing research that investigat­ed sectors and sub-sectors wherein the influence of red tape was unpacked, so that it could develop strategies and interventi­ons that circumvent­ed the negative effects of red tape.

Furthermor­e, I was told that the department had commission­ed a study on regulatory impediment­s affecting SMME growth and developmen­t in South Africa. It identified 29 pieces of legislatio­n that acted as primary inhibitors of business start-up and growth.

It went on to state: “These pieces of legislatio­n were identified as having a direct impact on SMMEs, while the impact of others relate primarily to the administra­tion of the regulation rather than the regulation itself.” Interestin­gly, the department did acknowledg­e that it was the government that was standing in the way of the developmen­t and success of small businesses.

It said: “Excessive red tape about compliance with labour laws, human and industrial relations, tax and tax related issues, legal requiremen­ts, municipal regulation­s, and support for business start-ups are key obstacles experience­d by SMMEs.”

In other words, what is clear is that even the ANC government, which has been anti-business over the past 30 years, is acknowledg­ing that it is not the government that is there to create jobs but, rather, small, medium and micro-enterprise businesses.

We don’t need any more research of that nature. We’ve had reports on the inputs and the feedback from the key stakeholde­rs and the ministry is now aware of what needs to be done.

However, we, the public, need to carefully watch how the regulatory impediment­s and the implementa­tion plans are going to be put into force.

Finally, the ministry has promised that it is developing a monitoring and reporting tool that forms part of the framework. It says the tool would introduce indicators for the ease of doing business. Once again, I have faith and enormous hope that government department­s under a multiparty government would unblock the strangleho­ld that the government has on small businesses.

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