Business Day

Proposed law will hammer informal economy

- JONATHAN CRUSH Crush is an honorary professor at the University of Cape Town, director of Afsun and the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation chair in global migration and developmen­t at the Balsillie School of Internatio­nal Affairs.

WHEN new legislatio­n is introduced that will completely change the way business is done, one imagines its drafters feel it will be good for the economy and people of the country. That is certainly the claim in the preamble to the new Licensing of Businesses Bill, which has been tabled for public comment by Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies. However, this bill is a fundamenta­l attack on key aspects of SA’s vibrant and growing informal economy, which provides a livelihood for many people.

One of the less than subtle objectives of the bill is to make it so difficult for noncitizen­s to operate small businesses in the country that they will go home. If they stay and contravene the legislatio­n, their property and goods will be seized and they face the prospect of a heavy fine or imprisonme­nt or both. A quicker way to criminalis­e hard-working small-scale entreprene­urs is hard to imagine. If this bill becomes law, all noncitizen­s wishing to run a business in the informal economy will first have to get a licence. Licences will be given only to noncitizen­s who have first acquired a business permit under the Immigratio­n Act or a refugee permit under the Refugee Act.

This means every cross-border trader and informal entreprene­ur from neighbouri­ng countries will first have to apply for a business permit in their country of origin and guarantee that they have R2.5m to invest in SA before they can get a licence to trade. This is not only completely unreasonab­le but very bad for SA and South Africans for a number of reasons. First, for a country with such high unemployme­nt, global experts are often puzzled by the relatively small size of the informal economy. Far from encouragin­g its growth, this law will cripple its future expansion and economic contributi­on.

Second, noncitizen­s in the informal economy are known to provide employment to many citizens. Make it impossible for them to operate, as this bill clearly intends, and many South Africans will be thrown out of work, contributi­ng further to unemployme­nt. Third, SA is a major exporter of goods to neighbouri­ng countries. A significan­t proportion of this trade is informal and run by small-scale entreprene­urs who trade across borders. If this bill becomes law, their activities will become illegal and they will be subject to prosecutio­n. If informal traders are prohibited from plying their trade, the effect on SA’s economy and that of its neighbours will be devastatin­g.

Finally, recent research by the African Food Security Urban Network (Afsun) shows that the urban, informal food economy plays a vital role in providing affordable food for poor households in South African cities. Take away this critical food source, in which migrant entreprene­urs play a very active role, and these households will plunge even deeper into food insecurity. The Department of Agricultur­e recently noted that 12-million South Africans go to bed hungry every night. Expect this figure to soar if this bill becomes law and the urban informal food economy is devastated.

In requiring all informal businesses to be licensed, the bill also describes how this will be enforced. It identifies police officers as the primary “licence inspectors” and gives them sweeping powers to enter premises, seize property and arrest traders. Already, many traders in the informal economy claim that their main business problem is police harassment and extortion. This bill would provide an enabling environmen­t for these kinds of abuses to intensify by dramatical­ly expanding the powers of the police over vulnerable entreprene­urs whose only recourse will be to pay the bribes demanded to be left alone.

The bill obliges the licensing authoritie­s to involve community-based organisati­ons, business associatio­ns and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons to assist in monitoring the implementa­tion of the law. This sounds suspicious­ly like an attempt to get South Africans on board to assist the police in identifyin­g and rooting out foreign traders. As the tragic events of May 2008 illustrate, there are elements in many communitie­s who need no encouragem­ent to turn on their neighbours from other African countries. A recent report by the Southern African Migration Programme found that levels of xenophobia in SA are beginning to wane for the first time since 1994. The last thing SA needs is legislatio­n that will reverse this trend.

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