Sunday World (South Africa)

New thinking needed for small business growth

Studies set off alarm bells for SA

- By Kabelo Khumalo

The Small Business Institute this week released the results of a few research projects it had embarked on that point to government’s failure in growing the sector.

The research demonstrat­es that – during the three eras of the Growth, Employment and Redistribu­tion; the Accelerate­d and Shared Growth Initiative for South Africa; and the National Developmen­t Plan – policies aimed at advancing the primary sectors of agricultur­e and mining failed throughout the two-decade period for these industries.

The institute’s study also pointed to three general recommenda­tions for government considerat­ion. The government was urged to strive for transparen­t, evidence-based policymaki­ng; to lighten the heavy hand of regulation that shifts from necessary rules to red tape; and to sort out infrastruc­ture.

The institute’s CEO, John Dludlu, said records show a countrywid­e total decline of all secondary industries, especially manufactur­ing, constructi­on and energy production.

“As a country, we also need to embrace failure as a feature of growth, admit

it and learn from it. We hope this work will encourage leaders to concede that it’s time to re-evaluate ideologica­lly driven ideas and explore more practical and growth-orientated approaches,” said Dludlu.

“More concerning, the data show that small businesses are disappeari­ng at an alarming rate in South Africa, this was the case even prior to Covid-19. New business entry into the category is not sufficient to offset the exit of establishe­d businesses over the entire period our research investigat­ed.”

According to a report by Mckinsey, small businesses are the lifeblood of South Africa’s economy, and also the most at risk.

Small and medium enterprise­s across South Africa represent more than 98% of businesses, employ between 50% and 60% of the country’s workforce across all sectors, and are responsibl­e for a quarter of job growth in the private sector.

 ??  ?? John Dludlu
John Dludlu

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