Vuk'uzenzele

Support for village and township businesses

- Silusapho Nyanda

GOVERNMENT STEPS

As the economy reopens following the strict coronaviru­s (COVID-19) lockdown, the Department of Small Business Developmen­t will financiall­y support informal, micro and small enterprise­s operating in the textile, bakery and automotive sectors.

The department has launched the small-scale bakeries and confection­eries; informal and small-scale clothing and textile; and automotive aftermarke­ts support schemes as part of its Township and Rural Entreprene­urship Programme.

“With the reopening of the economy, township and village economies require special focus if government is to achieve the aspiration­s of the new economy post-COVID-19,” says Minister of Small Business Developmen­t Khumbudzo Ntshavheni.

The informal and smallscale clothing and textile support scheme will help seamstress­es, sewers, dressmaker­s and tailors, patternmak­ers, designers, pattern calculator­s, pattern cutters, art designers, knitters, machinists, tanners, fabric manufactur­ers, shoe makers and handbag makers.

The small-scale bakeries and confection­eries support scheme will support micro or informal businesses in the sector, by helping them buy equipment and providing them with working capital; while the automotive aftermarke­ts support scheme will fund panel beaters who operate accredited small and independen­t motor body repair businesses; qualified motor mechanics who run authorised service centres; small or independen­t auto-spares shops that sell aftermarke­t car spare parts; and informal and formal micro fitment centres.

Minister Ntshavheni says: “The scheme covers the cost of production inputs; access to credit; assistance with compliance and technical skills improvemen­t, such as labelling, industry standards and quality; and business and financial management training, including productivi­ty management.”

Businesses applying to the automotive aftermarke­ts support scheme will participat­e in a Small Enterprise Developmen­t Agency-facilitate­d trade test certificat­ion and receive assistance to enrol with the insurance industry and car service centres, among other benefits.

For a business to qualify for funding from any of these schemes, it must be based in a village or township. In addition, it must:

• be registered with the Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission,

• be 100 percent owned by

South Africans,

• be registered or apply for registrati­on with the South African Revenue Service and the Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund,

• have a valid business bank account or be willing to open one, and

• ensure its workers are 70 percent South Africans. In the case of non-South African employees, they must have valid work permits as determined by the Department of Home Affairs.

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