A crime against business is a crime against all South Africans
Increasing crime against businesses affects costs, motivation and is a brake on investment and expansion, says Dr Johan Burger at the Institute for Security Studies
The official SA Police Service (SAPS) crime statistics for the 2011/12 financial year were generally positive, but had some bad news for the business sector, with a substantial 8.8% increase in robberies at business premises when compared to last year. A robbery is recorded when armed groups attack a business premises and threaten managers, employees and customers with violence in order to steal from them.
This differs to burglaries where thieves break into a premises while it is closed and no violence is threatened. Worryingly, business robberies have been increasing at an alarming rate since 2004/05 when 3 320 cases were reported to the police compared with the 15 951 cases reported in 2011/12. This is a dramatic increase of 342% over the past seven years
The increase comes after promising signs that business robberies were starting to stabilize. Between the last two financial years ending 2010/2011, the rate of increase dropped to 0,9%. Last year it looked as if the crime was shifting from larger businesses to smaller and medium sized enterprises. The Consumer Goods Council revealed that robberies amongst its members had decreased by 50% from 282 incidents in2008/09 to 139 incidents in 200/10.
According to the ADCORP Employment Index for February 2012, about 68% of all South African workers are employed by businesses with less than 50 workers with 43% of the national workforce employed by businesses with less than five people. In 2001 around 250,000 people started their own businesses, whereas in 2011 only 58,000 did so, a substantial decline of 76%. If the small business sector can be revived it can, according to the ADCORP Index, lead to the creation of more than five million new job opportunities. It is therefore worrying that in the past five years 440,000 small businesses were closed down and the number of new business start-ups has fallen to an all-time low. The additional burden of being targeted by armed criminal groups has only made matters worse.