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The hidden opportunities of the informal economy

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    The informal markets of Africa
    are stereotypically seen
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    as chaotic and lackadaisical.
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    The downside of hearing
    the word "informal"
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    is this automatic grand
    association we have,
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    which is very negative,
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    and it's had significant consequences
    and economic losses,
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    easily adding -- or subtracting --
    40 to 60 percent of the profit margin
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    for the informal markets alone.
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    As part of a task of mapping
    the informal trade ecosystem,
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    we've done an extensive literature review
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    of all the reports and research
    on cross-border trade in East Africa,
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    going back 20 years.
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    This was to prepare us for fieldwork
    to understand what was the problem,
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    what was holding back informal trade
    in the informal sector.
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    What we discovered
    over the last 20 years was,
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    nobody had distinguished
    between illicit --
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    which is like smuggling or contraband
    in the informal sector --
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    from the legal but unrecorded,
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    such as tomatoes, oranges, fruit.
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    This criminalization --
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    what in Swahili refers to as "biashara,"
    which is the trade or the commerce,
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    versus "magendo," which is
    the smuggling or contraband --
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    this criminalization
    of the informal sector,
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    in English, by not distinguishing
    between these aspects,
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    easily can cost each African economy
    between 60 to 80 percent addition
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    on the annual GDP growth rate,
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    because we are not recognizing the engine
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    of what keeps the economies running.
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    The informal sector is growing jobs
    at four times the rate
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    of the traditional formal economy,
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    or "modern" economy, as many call it.
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    It offers employment and income
    generation opportunities
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    to the most "unskilled"
    in conventional disciplines.
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    But can you make a french fry
    machine out of an old car?
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    So, this, ladies and gentlemen,
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    is what so desperately needs
    to be recognized.
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    As long as the current assumptions
    hold that this is criminal,
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    this is shadow,
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    this is illegal,
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    there will be no attempt at integrating
    the informal economic ecosystem
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    with the formal or even the global one.
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    I'm going to tell you a story of Teresia,
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    a trader who overturned
    all our assumptions,
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    made us question all the stereotypes
    that we'd gone in on,
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    based on 20 years of literature review.
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    Teresia sells clothes under a tree
    in a town called Malaba,
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    on the border of Uganda and Kenya.
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    You think it's very simple, don't you?
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    We'll go hang up new clothes
    from the branches,
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    put out the tarp, settle down,
    wait for customers,
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    and there we have it.
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    She was everything we were expecting
    according to the literature,
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    to the research,
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    right down to she was a single
    mom driven to trade,
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    supporting her kids.
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    So what overturned our assumptions?
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    What surprised us?
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    First, Teresia paid the county
    government market fees
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    every single working day
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    for the privilege of setting
    up shop under her tree.
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    She's been doing it for seven years,
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    and she's been getting receipts.
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    She keeps records.
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    We're seeing not a marginal,
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    underprivileged,
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    vulnerable African woman trader
    by the side of the road -- no.
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    We were seeing somebody
    who's keeping sales records for years;
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    somebody who had an entire ecosystem
    of retail that comes in from Uganda
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    to pick up inventory;
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    someone who's got handcarts
    bringing the goods in,
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    or the mobile money agent
    who comes to collect cash
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    at the end of the evening.
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    Can you guess how much
    Teresia spends, on average,
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    each month on inventory --
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    stocks of new clothes
    that she gets from Nairobi?
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    One thousand five hundred US dollars.
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    That's around 20,000 US dollars
    invested in trade goods and services
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    every year.
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    This is Teresia,
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    the invisible one,
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    the hidden middle.
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    And she's only the first rung
    of the small entrepreneurs,
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    the micro-businesses that can be found
    in these market towns.
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    At least in the larger Malaba border,
    she's at the first rung.
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    The people further up the value chain
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    are easily running
    three lines of business,
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    investing 2,500 to 3,000
    US dollars every month.
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    So the problem turned out
    that it wasn't the criminalization;
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    you can't really criminalize someone
    you're charging receipts from.
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    It's the lack of recognition
    of their skilled occupations.
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    The bank systems and structures
    have no means to recognize them
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    as micro-businesses,
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    much less the fact that, you know,
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    her tree doesn't have
    a forwarding address.
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    So she's trapped in the middle.
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    She's falling through the cracks
    of our assumptions.
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    You know all those microloans
    to help African women traders?
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    They're going to loan her
    50 dollars or 100 dollars.
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    What's she going to do with it?
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    She spends 10 times
    that amount every month
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    just on inventory --
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    we're not talking about
    the additional services
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    or the support ecosystem.
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    These are the ones who fit
    neither the policy stereotype
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    of the low-skilled and the marginalized,
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    nor the white-collar,
    salaried office worker
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    or civil servant with a pension
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    that the middle classes
    are allegedly composed of.
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    Instead, what we have here
    are the proto-SMEs
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    these are the fertile seeds
    of businesses and enterprises
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    that keep the engines running.
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    They put food on your table.
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    Even here in this hotel,
    the invisible ones --
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    the butchers, the bakers
    the candlestick makers --
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    they make the machines
    that make your french fries
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    and they make your beds.
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    These are the invisible businesswomen
    trading across borders,
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    all on the side of the road,
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    and so they're invisible
    to data gatherers.
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    And they're mashed together
    with the vast informal sector
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    that doesn't bother to distinguish
    between smugglers and tax evaders
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    and those running illegal whatnot,
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    and the ladies who trade,
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    and who put food on the table
    and send their kids to university.
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    So that's really what I'm asking here.
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    That's all that we need to start by doing.
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    Can we start by recognizing
    the skills, the occupations?
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    We could transform the informal economy
    by beginning with this recognition
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    and then designing the customized
    doorways for them to enter
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    or integrate with the formal,
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    with the global,
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    with the entire system.
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    Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The hidden opportunities of the informal economy
Speaker:
Niti Bhan
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:26

English subtitles

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