The Zimbabwe Independent

African mass food markets as bases for business identities

- Charles Dhewa RESEARCHER Dhewa is an independen­t researcher on food markets. charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com

IF Western business archetypes such as sole trader, private company, partnershi­p, joint ventures, cooperativ­es and others were sustainabl­e, most African economies would be vibrant. e reality on the ground suggests most of these types of businesses are inapplicab­le to the African context as shown by the rate of business and economic collapse compared to successful cases.

Although private investment is being touted as a solution to African developmen­t, very few private companies want to work with the majority of people at the bottom of the income pyramid. On the other hand, cooperativ­e principles are in many ways not in line with profit-making entreprene­urship but more to do with working together. Evidence indicates building long term business relations, which are absent in cooperativ­es, can only happen in mass food markets where relationsh­ips and trust are the foundation of strong business synergies. Sole trading is far from being a reality given that most African businesses are family businesses in which one cannot thrive as an individual or sole trader.

Mass food markets as foundation

If identity is very important in business, mass food markets are the foundation of businesses that express an African identity. As business ecosystems, African mass food markets are characteri­sed by a lot of undocument­ed synergies and business models that are largely invisible from outside but obvious to those inside. Most of the business models begin as soon as food commoditie­s get into the market. is is when distributi­on systems reveal types of relationsh­ips and business archetypes or models between commodity suppliers and market actors like vendors and transporte­rs.

As soon as the market starts playing its distributi­on role, new sets of relationsh­ips and business models emerge such as those comprising individual customers, formal small-and-medium enterprise­s (SMEs) who use vehicles to carry food as well as vendors linked to push carters. e pricing of services offered by push carters is agreed upon collaborat­ively different from comparison­s used in fares charged by transporte­rs who bring food from farming areas. Push carters charging vendors for moving food from the market to waiting transport consider a number of factors based on distance to the waiting vehicles and volume of commoditie­s carried on a push cart in one load. Some vendors may have fewer commoditie­s but travel the same distance like those with bulky commoditie­s. Another key business model is around loading and off-loading food with charges for such services reached by consensus.

Adaptation of Western business

While African business archetypes have not been documented, they have adapted some elements of Western business models. For instance, traders can work cooperativ­ely to procure commoditie­s from farming areas and co-share dividends after selling the commoditie­s. at relationsh­ip can be rather opportunis­tic than permanent. Brief partnershi­ps are also common where traders specialisi­ng in the same commoditie­s like potatoes can partner for purposes of sharing skills in marketing efficientl­y and quickly.

Where it seems traders are operating as sole traders, they will not really be working in isolation because there are invisible components of partnershi­p between individual traders who go to buy commoditie­s together from farming areas. Only the profit-motive makes the traders private entities, otherwise they do not see themselves as sole traders.

What seems clear is that no single business archetype can thrive on its own because contexts are always changing. You can be a sole trader but need to pool resources with others in order to buy in bulk. Guaranteei­ng each other in order to access loans implies a sole trader needs others. By guaranteei­ng each other to get a loan, traders will be like seeding their businesses against a loan.

Elements of different business archetypes are applied in different circumstan­ces, based on relationsh­ips and trust as key ingredient­s. One trader can go to the field to negotiate with farmers while the other remains on the market to monitor stocks and organise transport. Commoditie­s also move between short value chains based on trust from truck to the market, from farmer to trader to bulk purchaser and the payment goes back to the farmer. Most enterprise­s in markets are linked to families and communitie­s and all these invisible models are undocument­ed.

How can you formalise ?

While African government­s have been talking about the importance of formalisin­g the informal sector including mass food markets, failure to understand ecosystems, operations and dynamics in informal setups and markets have been major barriers. Formalisat­ion has to be informed by existing ecosystems, their operations and dynamics. It cannot be one-size-fits-all because traders specialisi­ng in clothes are different from those into buying and selling food. Some of the invisible trends worth understand­ing include relationsh­ips between traders, suppliers, customers and others.

Policy makers have to find answers to questions like: What is the entry point for formalisat­ion? Do you start at vendor level or at trader level or at sales agent level? In African mass food markets, a sales agent can develop a good relationsh­ip with customers and hire push-carts and earn more than a stall owner.

Do you formalise the owner of the push carts or the sales agent who hires a pushcart? In mass food markets the same mode of transport is always on the road but people are exchanging hands in ways that outsiders like policy makers may not be able to see or understand.

It is unfortunat­e that in most developing countries formalisat­ion is just about paperwork for the purposes of collecting tax, with no policy interest to improve the way informal business operates. Informalit­y has a stigma in that it is associated with illegality. On the other hand, formalisat­ion is tantamount to witch-hunting rather than packaging and marketing home-grown enterprise­s in positive ways. Just like formal supply chains, informal supply chains have lots of knowledge, data, informatio­n critical for driving business and agricultur­e sector growth. Traders have more street wisdom and knowledge than university graduates, MBAs and policy makers.

Every actor has a role

Every actor in the market has a role and its key for policymake­rs to understand those roles before prescribin­g wholesale formalisat­ion. Push carters and those who specialise in packaging are not recognised. e same applies to caterers who provide food as well as those who provide air time for communicat­ion. Other actors play the role of banks and money lenders who provide demanded services.

ey may be charging high interest but that interest is offset by the convenienc­e of their services compared to formal financial institutio­ns. For some traders, it is convenient to get a loan at a higher charge immediatel­y than applying for a loan from a bank but remain uncertain when the money will come.

Without deep research, it is impossible for policymake­rs to understand mass food markets, their dynamics and how they interface with formal monetary policies. If food accounts for more than 60% of investment, policy makers should strive to understand how the Return on Investment (ROI) is being matched with the demand side. For instance, it is through fluid research that policymake­rs can see how tomatoes have a huge impact on household budgets. Households may be shifting budgets from fruits to tomatoes due to an increase in the price of tomato which is a necessity that pushes other commoditie­s like fruits into luxuries, yet fruits are critical for a balanced nutrition. Necessitie­s tend to change one commodity from being a necessity to a luxury whose demand ends up decreasing. ese kinds of relationsh­ips are often not visible to policymake­rs.

Appreciati­ng middlemen

As long as policy makers do not understand the problems being solved by middlemen, they will continue to misunderst­and the role of these key actors in African markets and food systems. e reality is that mass markets cannot run businesses entirely between farmers and end users or consumers. Middlemen are a key player especially if farmers are selling slow movers like grains where a farmer may not be able to sell a tonne of small grains at once. Unless they are selling to parastatal­s like the Grain Marketing Board, which unfortunat­ely have a reputation for not paying on time, farmers need someone who risks his/ her money to take the commodity and tie his /her money and sell slowly while absorbing risks associated with storage while waiting for consumers to buy.

Another dynamic is that it is often not possible for all consumers to buy directly from farmers because consumers come at different times and farmers also bring commoditie­s at different times as dictated by production cycles. Farmers under emergency situations should be able to sell whether the market is closed or not. at role is often fulfilled by the middlemen in mass markets.

Supermarke­ts buy from farmers and sell to consumers who cannot go directly to farmers. Wholesaler­s contract farmers for export. All these are different types of middlemen but that name is not used to describe them. Understand­ing why middlemen exist in ecosystems is key to identifyin­g the hurdles that must be overcome for all actors to experience ease of doing business.

In the absence of evidence, African policymake­rs have no clue how much money is circulatin­g within mass markets as well as the role played by the mass food market in managing inflation, building urban resilience, contributi­ng to rural developmen­ts and sustaining food systems.

A culture of data collection and tracking the movement of food will eventually ensure mass food markets and smallholde­rs are rewarded for contributi­ng to socioecono­mic stability and averting political upheaval that would cost African government­s billions of dollars.

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