Zimbabwe: The power of the informal economy
We need to harness the creativity in this market and facilitate its further development as opposed to mentally labeling it the" informal" market
Sometime last year, I wrote on new perspectives on the Zimbabwean economy, where I shared with my readers how, in Zimbabwe, because of the high unemployment levels, a significant number of the township population have become entrepreneurs successfully operating in the informal economy.
I called it the second economy but apparently it has now been termed System D- meaning the DIY system where individuals are highly creative and flexible in delivering products and services to a market that they truly understand. System D is made up of inventive, self-starting, entrepreneurial merchants who are doing business on their own, without registering or being regulated by the bureaucracy and, for the most part, without paying taxes,
I would estimate that this economy, which occupies a significant portion of the 90% of our unemployed people, is worth quite a few billion per annum and cannot continue to be ignored. I also estimate that this economy is probably more active than the first economy, with significant amounts of cash changing hands each day.
To give my readers some perspective, according to Robert Nuewrith, the American journalist and author who described system D, the so called informal market or system D in the world is worth staggering USD10 trillion per annum and employs an estimated 1. 8 billion people.