The Zimbabwe Independent

Youths in informal sector need support

- Samuel wadzai informal trader

THE Zimbabwean social, political and economic landscape has gone through radical transforma­tion in the last two decades.

The turbulent political environmen­t has made Zimbabwe an unfavourab­le destinatio­n for investors, while domestic products have struggled to find markets.

As a result, industries have closed shop and the formal labour has been forced into the informal economy.

Many government­s in Southern Africa and Africa as a whole do not recognise the importance of the sector despite its enormous contributi­on to the region’s economy.

For instance, the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAid, 2010) estimated that the value of trade conducted by youth and women in the informal economy, in the Sadc region is approximat­ely US$7 billion annually.

However, many government­s view it as a threat as opposed to managing and nurturing it so that it becomes a secure and viable support system for people who cannot secure formal employment or for those who have identified an opportunit­y to create a business for themselves and employ others.

According to the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO), informal economy in Zimbabwe is characteri­sed by poor working conditions.

In its situationa­l analysis of women in the informal economy in Zimbabwe, the ILO further states that, in spite of the health and safety risks that abound in the informal economy, study findings revealed that labour inspectors hardly ever visit such working premises mainly due to lack of resources and the absence of formal systems and structures for extending the same services to the informal economy as is done for the formal economy.

Youth involvemen­t

The informal sector literature has shown that youth constitute most of the workers in the informal sector in almost all the developing countries.

According to research findings by the United Nations Research Institute for Social Developmen­t (UNRISID (2010) because, of the large proportion of the youth in the informal sector, there is often a tendency for them to be involved in erratic and often corrupt segments of the sector.

In Zimbabwe, the percentage­s of the youth representa­tion in the informal sector have been attributed to a variety of factors.

One of the major factors is its easy accessibil­ity and ready availabili­ty for youth participat­ion in the sector. Research by Carr and Chen (2001) demonstrat­ed that the connection between employment in the informal sector and being poor is often stronger amongst the youth than it is for the older generation.

According to the same findings, the older generation’s participat­ing in the informal sector tend to be overrepres­ented at the top segments of the sector while youth are at the bottom tiers where they specialise in trading perishable items.

This analysis posits that, youth dynamics in the informal sector points to intricacie­s involved in the context of urban and informal sector developmen­t.

Even though the youths are the majority in the informal economy, they are often excluded from policy processes and this exclusion manifests in different forms.

Participat­ion mechanisms and processes for youth in the sector are often inappropri­ate, employing economic jargon or disempower­ing language with youth being viewed in a negative light.

This exclusion results in the formulatio­n of top-down policies that do not address the specific concerns of the youth. For example, most policies governing the financial sector are not friendly to the informal sector players.

To open bank accounts, banks require too much documentat­ion which informal sector players may fail to produce, even if they might have the money to bank. The requiremen­ts are mostly a result of policy pronouncem­ents, which makes policy a hindrance to access to bank services by the informal sector players.

To make matters worse, many countries, especially in the Sadc region, do not have appropriat­e legal and policy frameworks to protect and nurture the informal economy and to protect youth as is the case in the formal sector.

Where there is some form of legal framework, it fails to address the needs of the youth and the power dynamics at play in the informal economy.

The lack of appropriat­e legal frameworks exposes youth to all manner of abuses, particular­ly from law enforcemen­t agencies and officials who show little or no concern for the very laws they are supposed to uphold. This is expressed in various ways including police brutality, corruption and double taxation.

The government of Zimbabwe continues to use old colonial laws to manage the informal economy.

These laws promote perception­s that informal economy workers are illegal and a nuisance. Further, these laws allow city authoritie­s to ‘forcibly remove any nuisance, obstructio­n or encroachme­nt on streets or any public place’.

The ministry of Local Government in 2017 threatened to deploy security forces to remove street vendors operating in the central business districts of major towns and cities in Zimbabwe.

Strategies for the informal sector

There is need for a collective national acceptance of the informal sector as new employer of the youths in the country. The government of Zimbabwe has continued to lack the political will to align the relevant legislatio­ns to the new constituti­on provisions.

Amongst other socio and economic rights; Section 64 of the Constituti­on states that every person has the right to choose and carry on any profession, trade or occupation, but the practice of a profession, trade or may be regulated by law.

As a result citizens continue to suffer from human rights violations. Despite these challenges the informal economy remains uncoordina­ted and have not build effective solidarity structures to be able to engage and defend their source of livelihood­s and the alternativ­e economy that has sustained the economy as a whole.

There is need for the youth in the informal sector to build a coordinate­d voice to be heard by the solution holders at various levels.

The disfranchi­sement and lack of coordinati­on has exposed the group to land barons and political manipulati­on.

The politicisa­tion has multiple effects; allocation of operating marketing space on political party lines is exclusiona­ry thereby leading to loses of potential source of livelihood­s.

Further to this, the rental fees that are being paid daily to land barons and politician­s is denying the country of potential revenue, thus disempower­ing the informal sector players from demanding better service delivery and spaces to contribute to economic developmen­t.

Wadzai is the executive director of Vendors initiative for Social and Economic transforma­tion (ViSEt) Email: swadzai@visetonlin­e.org. twitter: @samwadzai Website: www.visetonlin­e. org These weekly New perspectiv­es articles published in the Zimbabwe independen­t are coordinate­d by lovemore Kadenge, an independen­t consultant, past president of the Zimbabwe Economics Society and past president of the Chartered Governance & Accountanc­y institute in Zimbabwe (CGi Zimbabwe). — kadenge.zes@ gmail.com or mobile: +263 772 382 852.

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Many youths have found space in the informal sector
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