Alphabetical           State by State
 Finance Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Finance
 Advice
 Banking
 Bankruptcy
 Bonds
 Chats and Forums
 Conventions and Conferences
 Corporate Profiles and Reports
 Currency
 Earnings Calendars
 Exchanges
 Financial Services
 Financing
 Futures and Options
 Hard Assets
 Information Media
 Initial Public Offerings
 Insurance
 Investing
 Investment Models
 Investment Picks
 Motley Fool
 MSN MoneyCentral
 News and Media
 Organizations
 Reference and Guides
 Retirement Planning
 Small-Cap Investing
 Socially Responsible Investing
 Technical Analysis
 Usenet
 Venture Capital
 Web Directories
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Study Says Africa's 'Gray' Economy Helps Fight Poverty
Monday, April 28, 2008 2:09 AM

The African Union has been presented with startling new statistics on the extent and importance of the informal, or gray,...


The African Union has been presented with startling new statistics on the extent and importance of the informal, or gray, economy in alleviating poverty and boosting economic growth. From AU headquarters in Addis Ababa, VOA's Peter Heinlein reports the informal sector makes up the bulk of all economic activity in some African countries.

Best quality of fish are usually exported

A fish market in Guinea

In much of Africa, the informal, or gray economy that escapes tax collectors and government regulators, is the hidden dynamic driving economic growth. That's the conclusion of a study presented at an African Union Labor and Social Affairs Commission session this week.

The gray economy is often talked about in whispers, partly because it is technically illegal, or at best semi-legal.

But statistics presented this week indicate that in countries such as Ethiopia and Cameroon, 90 percent of all non-farm jobs are in the gray sector. Figures suggest that most young people in African countries south of the Sahara initially enter the work force informally.

AU Social Affairs Commissioner Bience Gawanas says it is time to accept that the informal economy is a significant force in fighting poverty in countries where government overregulation forces economic activity underground.

"That part of the economy has always played second fiddle. It has always played the kind of stepdaughter of the formal economy. We must recognize that sector as having potential of poverty alleviation," Gawanas said.

A study concludes that the majority of informal sector workers remain poor, unprotected by labor laws, uncovered by social security schemes, and underserved by formal education systems.

Commissioner Gawanas noted that across Africa, women are much more likely to be engaged in informal sector work. More than four out of five women are informally employed, as compared to about two-thirds of men. She says bringing the gray economy out of the shadows is the modern day equivalent of the move a few decades ago to recognize the value of women's work.

"It's like formally many, many years ago, the work women did in the household wasn't ever regarded as work. There was no value attached to it, but today because of the battles that were fought and won, there is at least a value attached to women's work. And that is the same value we are fighting for in terms of the informal economy," she said.

Recent studies from seven African countries suggest the informal economy is a significant factor throughout the continent. South Africa's informal sector was the smallest, making up 30 percent of the Gross National Income, while in Benin, Cameroon, Senegal, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, the figure was above 60 percent.

Azad Jeetun, secretary-general of the Pan African Employers Confederation, says government overregulation is preventing the formation of small business that could create the formal sector jobs needed for economic growth.

"Many enterprises become informal because of the cost of doing business, the cost of obtaining a permit is very high. The time it requires to get a permit is very high, and there are so many administrative bottlenecks, and therefore it becomes quite difficult to operate in the formal sector, so they go to work in the informal economy. So what is important here is that we have to simplify the procedures for enterprises to obtain licenses and permits to operate. We have to simplify the procedures for taxation," she said.

Jeetun was one of several speakers advocating deregulation as a key to poverty alleviation across Africa. They pointed to statistics showing a sharp decline in the formal sector during the 1990s, when more than nine out of 10 new jobs created south of the Sahara, excluding South Africa, were in the informal, gray sector.

Finance
Get Stock Quote: Enter Symbol(s)

Symbol Lookup
My Portfolio
Our Privacy Vow 
  • Financial Home

  • Thousands of Protesters Rally in Northern Japan Against G8 Summit

  • World Oil Prices Ease From Record Highs

  • US Economy Loses More Jobs in June  

  • Analysts: End to Rising Oil Prices Not in Sight  

  • Argonne National Laboratory Works on Alternative Fuel Technology  

  • Economy Putting Squeeze on Retirees  

  • US Economy Loses Jobs for Sixth Straight Month

  • UN: 50 Million More People Hungry Due to High Food Prices

  • Oil Prices Soar to Record High of Nearly $146 a Barrel

  • Zimbabwe Central Bank Seen Constrained In Money-Printing Operations  

  • Group in Kenya Makes Objects of Beauty Out of Trash  

  • Report: Unemployment to Rise in OECD Countries

  • Millions of Truckers in India Begin Strike  

  • US Stocks Gain in Opening Trading

  • Iranian Oil Minister says Attack on Iran Will Impact Oil Prices

  • British Truckers Converge on Parliament in Latest Fuel Cost Protest

  • Top Sustainable Energy Prize Awarded for Energy-Efficient Stove

  • Bush Administration Cites 'Executive Privilege' in Environmental Decisions

  • Natural Disasters Raise Health Concerns  

  • Worldwide Whaling Body Meeting in Chile

  • US Supreme Court Rejects Environmentalists' Challenge to Border Fence

  • Australia, Japan Clash at International Whale Summit  

  • At California Organic Farm, Seeking Enlightenment Through Organic Gardening  

  • Florida Land Deal Will Boost Everglades Restoration  

  • Individual 'Carbon Footprints' Can Be Measured on the Web  

  • British PM Calls for Wind Power; Increasing Global Focus on Alternative Energy

  • Independent Groups Warn Olympics Exacerbating Beijing's Water Crisis  

  • Hungary Opens Eastern Europe's First Sun-Powered Conference Center  

  • India Unveils National Plan to Deal With Threat of Global Warming  

  • Kenyan Honey Project Helps Raise Income