Quarry Southern Africa September 2018 | Page 3

COMMENT AFRICA’S GROWING INFORMAL ECONOMY H ow reliable are South Africa’s GDP growth statistics? Certainly, those that relate to employment levels should be taken with a pinch of salt. One statistic we frequently hear is Zimbabwe’s 95% unemployment rate. This unscientific statistic gets regularly trotted out whenever someone with an agenda wants to plunge us into depression by saying that Zimbabwe is the future of South Africa. If anyone truly believes 95% of Zimbabweans are sitting around in long- term unemployment, they are deluded. In South Africa, there is plenty evidence that the informal economy is much bigger than we believe, and that unemployment is probably lower than is reported. Speaking at the launch of a new product range by PPC in late July, economist and sector specialist Dr Roelof Botha commented on how many official statistics of the engineering and construction (E&C) sector are at odds with turnover by the building material sector. Afrimat, the opencast mining company producing industrial minerals, commodities, and construction materials, this year announced a more than 10% increase in revenue. It had a combined annual growth rate of 12.3% from 2014 to 2018. Today, its listed market share exceeds the joint market share of ArcelorMittal, Aveng, Group Five, and Basil Read — companies which a decade ago were in some cases multiples of that of Afrimat. Listed Cashbuild similarly increased turnover 5% in 2018 and 15% in 2017. These increases do not reflect a sector struggling to survive. The anomaly between official statistics of the sectors points to a growing and massive informal market in South Africa. Adcorp economist Loane Sharp estimates South Africa’s informal economy at 18% of GDP. It is comfortably outpacing the growth in the formal economy. Nielsen pegs the annual spend through spaza outlets at one in every R5 spent and one-third of all consumer-packaged goods sold in the country. We’re on a par with Spain, Italy, and Greece in terms of the informal economy’s contribution to total GDP. The African Development Bank estimates that the informal sector contributes about 55% of sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP and 80% of the labour force. Lief Petersen, CEO of the Sustainable Livelihoods Foundation (SLF), puts the contribution to GDP at closer to 90% and claims South Africa will in time likely mirror the rest of Africa. Even the E&C sector is moving sideways rather than down. According to Stats SA, the construction sector’s contribution to GDP growth in Q1 2018 was a decline of -1.4%. Dr Botha says it was in reality an increase of 1.5% — because Stats SA’s methodology is incorrect (it looks at quarter on quarter growth rather than growth over the comparable quarter the previous year). The cause of apprehension is that the distribution of work is shifting down the value chain. The value of contracts undertaken by large listed firms has declined while that of medium and small-sized firms has increased. Contractors are also subcontracting a greater proportion of their work than was previously the case. It is likely that this push-down of work is not stopping at the level of formal companies, but more work is being performed by the informal sector. The same is evident in retail. An on-the-ground research project conducted by SLF found 1 600 business activities in one 2.5km 2 area of Midrand’s Ivory Park alone. That ‘1 600’ is no typo. None of these businesses are counted by Stats SA, nor do they pay income tax or corporate tax to Sars. In fact, their very existence is a crime, according to municipalities. A key feature of the informal market is that it is dictated by price alone, and provides a ready market for cheap cement imports, which are also steadily increasing. SLF also found that among some basic products, more than 85% of their trade was in counterfeit products (especially cigarettes). Nico Pienaar, director of Aspasa, describes the hundreds of illegal quarries in South Africa as one of the biggest challenges to the industry. Yes, it is, but it is also a reflection that a substantial component of every market is keen to evade the over-regulation and over-taxation that occurs in South Africa. What we call the informal sector here is virtually the entire economy of almost all African countries — including Zimbabwe. We need to realise that 95% of Zimbabweans are not unemployed, but are rather participants in the informal economy. South Africa needs to make an important decision: decide whether it is a part of Africa and stop viewing the informal market as a crime. By harassing the informal economy rather than embracing it (and introducing more limited regulation of it) we virtually guarantee low GDP Editor growth rates. ■ [email protected] Eamonn Ryan QUARRY SA | SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2018 _ 1