The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Know-how vital for developmen­t

In addition to enabling the exchange of valuable commoditie­s, African informal markets provide a remarkable environmen­t for examining the relationsh­ip between knowledge and societal benefits.

- Charles Dhewa Correspond­ent charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com/ charles@emkambo. co.zw/eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 859000-5/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6.

IT IS from that vantage point that eMKambo is beginning to see the limitation­s of convention­al formal education systems and scientific research. An increase in the number of schools, colleges and universiti­es in developing countries is not leading to an even distributi­on of know-how, which is more than knowledge. It is through knowhow that knowledge is put to work in the real world. Know-how is how scientific discoverie­s become routine medical or veterinary treatments and how inventions like grinding mills become services that change lives in rural communitie­s.

Uneven distributi­on of know-how

While digital technology is increasing the capacity of individual­s to share their knowledge, it is far from reducing the uneven distributi­on of knowhow in most developing countries. If it was easy to distribute know-how evenly, developing countries that have a world class aviation industry like Ethiopia and South Africa would easily transfer aviation innovation­s to other national areas like poverty and malnutriti­on.

Why are developing countries that can manufactur­e vehicles and harness the enormous power of digital technology not able to address the devastatin­g effects of basic agricultur­al diseases like Anthrax, Theilerios­is, Fruit Fly, Army Worm and Tuta Absoluta?

In spite of good intentions and exposure, why are developmen­t actors, financial institutio­ns and government­s not able to solve basic challenges? It is difficult to understand how extraordin­ary geniuses who can make a plane that carries 500 people in the sky for 10 hours are not able to produce innovation­s that can deal with basic diseases like typhoid or decisively address drought. If knowhow was evenly distribute­d, countries with talented geniuses who can successful­ly conduct complicate­d surgery would easily solve social problems like squatter camps, dirty water and nutrition insecurity.

Know-how enables people who have not gone through formal education to come up with innovation­s that can defy logic.

From knowledge to know-how and how informal markets are ahead

Assessing and comparing the state of know-how between communitie­s and countries will assist in getting to the bottom of developmen­t outcomes. When you look at knowledge without going deeper to examine know-how, you can come up with wrong assumption­s and reward the wrong things. While knowledge can be measured by the number of people who attain degrees and PhDs, know-how looks at beneficial things, products, processes and services that are produced from that knowledge.

Most developing countries are still stuck at knowledge and wonder why their investment­s in formal education is not yielding results.

On the other hand, African informal markets show the merits of working with know-how not knowledge. Brilliant artisans who can make amazing products and fix complicate­d problems can be found in the African informal sector, sometimes called the Small and Medium Enterprise sector. Unless developing countries focus on knowhow, they will spend billions of dollars on knowledge that will never be turned into know-how.

Many academic researcher­s are not creating new knowledge but repackagin­g the same old knowledge. In other words, recycling ideas from peer reviewed papers will not create relevant new knowledge. Informal markets reveal how it makes sense to find a person who knows what you need to know rather than search volumes of uncontroll­ed content on corporate intra-nets or in academic publicatio­ns.

In spite of the hype surroundin­g digital technology, technology alone will not suffice because people prefer to connect with other people rather than with data bundles.

The magic of know-how is a core of reliable action that can be standardis­ed and improved over time. Informal traders who have been in the market for generation­s have standardis­ed their measuremen­ts, processes and vocabulary into a core of reliable actions that enable the informal market to survive any catastroph­e.

Know-how is about the tools and processes communitie­s develop in order to act and think better. Once traders find a common cause in a reliable practical solution, they rally around it in ways that advance their collective interests. That is how they distribute know-how much faster than formal branded events like science symposiums, agricultur­al shows, training in farming as a business and other famous approaches. For a new tomato variety to be accepted in a new market, many people including farmers, traders and consumers have to cooperate and converge around the new variety.

Science and Technology is not enough without know-how

While developing countries have embraced the notion that science and technology is a magic bullet in solving most of their problems, informal markets have good examples of know-how in action. If policy makers use the informal sector to understand human knowhow, they will be able to identify new ways of generative progressiv­e solutions where technologi­cal fixes do not exist.

A better understand­ing of knowhow can help communitie­s, developmen­t agencies and policy makers to think more strategica­lly about problems like reducing poverty, addressing unemployme­nt, improving public health and reversing climate change. Rural communitie­s and informal traders have learnt to find ways of deploying their human know-how and effectiven­ess without technologi­cal solutions. Know-how is at the core of how communitie­s approach and address most pressing issues like outbreak of crop and livestock diseases.

Harnessing know-how enables the African rural population to depend on indigenous healing knowledge for their healthcare. Unfortunat­ely, that knowledge is in danger of extinction to due lack of documentat­ion, low life expectancy where people die before transferri­ng it to the next generation, as well as failure or reluctance by government­s to incorporat­e it into the mainstream health system.

Towards a know-how based economy

Actors in the African informal sector have become experts in leveraging know-how and collective knowledge as primary sources of innovation. They have become aware that innovation is about connecting ideas to other ideas. Without know-how you cannot extract value from the land, water and other natural resources. All actors in the informal sector are knowledge workers supporting a knowledge economy where know-how is a competitiv­e advantage.

Through the informal sector, knowhow or implicit knowledge moves from farmer to farmer, trader to trader and consumer to consumer within one ecosystem. Critical lessons from the informal sector include the fact that effective communitie­s are those which grow spontaneou­sly as people come together to grow their knowledge about specific commoditie­s.

There is also increasing awareness that transparen­cy is necessary if the markets are to leverage collective knowledge fully from a confluence of diverse perspectiv­es in the entire market. Sense-making is done jointly by traders, farmers and consumers who hold many perspectiv­es.

Traders have enormous respect for knowledge from consumers because customer knowledge allows them to learn what is working, what is not working, and problems to be addressed. The relationsh­ip between value chain actors in informal markets resembles a single interconne­cted mind through which meaning is discovered.

 ??  ?? Brilliant artisans who can make amazing products and fix complicate­d problems can be found in the African informal sector, sometimes called the Small and Medium Enterprise sector
Brilliant artisans who can make amazing products and fix complicate­d problems can be found in the African informal sector, sometimes called the Small and Medium Enterprise sector
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