Mail & Guardian

Zulu laments inadequate budget

The minister says R5bn and an overhaul of the ecomony are needed for SMMEs to create 90% of new jobs

- Dineo Bendile

Small Business Developmen­t Minister Lindiwe Zulu says the R1.4-billion budget allocated to her department is not enough to provide support to small and medium enterprise­s (SMME), identified by the ANC as key to growing the economy and creating jobs.

She wants Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan to allocate not less than R5-billion to her department in the new financial year. He will deliver his budget speech later this month.

President Jacob Zuma created the small business ministry in 2014 to support the goals of the National Developmen­t Plan, which anticipate­d that 90% of the jobs would be created by that sector.

But given the state of the economy and the slow pace at the department, this is probably a pipe dream.

The economy grew 0.5% last year and is forecast to grow by 1.4% this year. In the third quarter of last year unemployme­nt reached its highest level in 13 years, increasing from 25.5% to 27.1%.

Zulu believes there could be an improvemen­t if more resources were allocated to her department. “I think if we were to start with something like R5-billion it would go a long way. How [do] we [talk] about people needing financial access and yet we don’t have financial access?”

Last week the ANC’s national executive committee took a resolution to focus on radical socioecono­mic transforma­tion through changing ownership patterns of the economy.

Now, just three years since its creation, Zulu’s department has the task of trying to stimulate economic growth and transforma­tion through SMMEs.

Apart from an insufficie­nt budget, the department also has an inadequate staffing component with fewer than 200 employees servicing the needs of many small business owners across the country, Zulu lamented to the Mail & Guardian this week.

“It’s impossible to think you can be able to cover nine provinces with less than 200 people. It just doesn’t work that way,” she said.

Zulu also lambasted the business sector for failing to deliver on its promise to contribute money to support small businesses.

Last year the private sector committed itself to giving R1.5-billion to assist SMMEs. But the funds have not been forthcomin­g, with big business deciding instead to seek shares from the small businesses that they help.

“The private sector should have just stayed with their R1.5-billion and looked for equity and not come to us and make us maklea whole lot of noise. It’s almost a year now that that announceme­nt was made,” Zulu said.

She also expressed frustratio­n with the developmen­t finance institutio­ns supported by government for hampering the growth of small businesses by putting in place stringent criteria, such as requesting guarantees before issuing loans to small business owners.

Zulu said this behaviour was counterpro­ductive and went against the goal of a developmen­t-focused economy.

“We need to relax some of the conditions that are put on people because what’s the point of getting people not to go to the bank, but to go to the developmen­t agencies, only to find that the conditions are almost the same but they’re just put in a nice way?

“When I engaged with people that were given loans, I began to understand that [with] many of them, it’s not because they took the money and chowed it.

“It’s because the environmen­t is not conducive for them to return the money.”

In its January 8 anniversar­y statement, the ANC announced that legislatio­n would come into effect this year that would require large companies to subcontrac­t 30% of their projects to SMMEs.

Zulu said the move to include SMMEs had been long overdue and would go a long way towards exposing small businesses to relevant markets.

“The fact that this has taken so long was one of the most annoying things for me when I arrived,” she said.

“It is the people who are sitting in there with the contracts and looking at people who have applied who have to make sure that is implemente­d. So we are going to be like a watchdog and oversee that.”

Even if her department did get the budget allocation Zulu wants, she said the most pertinent transforma­tion would be an overhaul of the economy to make it more inclusive of small players.

“The question is, does this economy provide a conducive environmen­t

 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Support: Minister Lindiwe Zulu says radical steps are needed to build up black-owned small businesses.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Support: Minister Lindiwe Zulu says radical steps are needed to build up black-owned small businesses.

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