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The township entrepreneurs who built a R1-trillion economy deserve accountable parity — now

In a country where 80% of township businesses are dubbed "informal", the real shocker isn't their unregistered status but rather the outdated notion that these vibrant entrepreneurs are waiting for a bureaucratic rescue instead of thriving on their own terms, proving that independence doesn’t equate to lawlessness, it just demands a smarter, more tailored approach to accountability.
The township entrepreneurs who built a R1-trillion economy deserve accountable parity — now Informal businesses in Soweto on 29 September. (Photo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake)

Standard Bank recently released its inaugural Informal Economy Report, saying “80% of township businesses are unregistered”. It’s a striking statistic, but also a symptom of how we still talk about township entrepreneurs instead of with them.

Words shape worlds. Calling 80% of entrepreneurs “informal” suggests deficiency. In policy language, it codes for “less than” – a bias that seeps into laws, lending and public attitudes. 

It implies that the people building South Africa’s most dynamic local markets are somehow incomplete, waiting to be fixed, registered or rescued.

But informality in South Africa isn’t a moral failure. It’s a structural adaptation. Registration is not prohibitively expensive in rand terms, but the real costs are access barriers (internet, documentation), time away from trading and fear of harassment by authorities. As such, independence becomes rational. Many township businesses stay independent not because they can’t comply, but because formal systems were never built with them in mind.

The report “reveals” what township communities have long known: they are productive, creative and self-financed. The real revelation is for the formal sector, which is only now noticing the R1-trillion economy – nearly 19.5% of South Africa’s total employment – it has historically ignored.

What we call the “informal economy” is, in truth, the independent economy: millions of entrepreneurs who have built systems of production, distribution and trust outside the mainstream. They employ neighbours, circulate cash locally and innovate daily with minimal support. They deserve the same respect we grant corporates: measured not only by tax receipts but by livelihoods sustained and dignity restored.

Independence without accountability

But let us be honest about what independence also means: no food safety inspections, no consumer recourse, no labour protections, fire hazards in densely packed spaza shops and environmental damage from unmonitored waste. 

These aren’t abstract risks, they are daily realities that hurt the very communities these businesses serve.

The problem isn’t the entrepreneurs – it is that our regulatory system has only two settings: full compliance or total exclusion. A one-person spaza can’t afford the same health inspection regime as a Shoprite, but it still needs to meet basic hygiene standards.

So the question is not whether standards matter – they do. The question is: who sets them and who enforces them?

The answer cannot be “nobody” simply because the current system is unworkable. Independence needs accountability, but accountability designed for micro-enterprise realities, not imposed from corporate templates.

The work, then, is redesigning accountability itself. Here’s where we start:

Community-based verification: Peer networks that enforce quality and safety standards. Township businesses already police themselves through reputation and community trust. Strengthen these mechanisms without destroying their flexibility.

Tiered regulatory thresholds: Different compliance requirements for different scales. A salon with five stylists should not face the same labour law regime as a mining company, but workers still need basic protections.

A general view of informal businesses on September 29, 2020 in Soweto, South Africa. It is reported that a new Township Bill promises to bar foreigners from doing business in Gauteng townships unless they have successfully applied for residency status in South Africa. (Phoo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake)
Informal businesses in Soweto on 29 September 2020. (Photo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake)

Digital tools that reduce friction: Mobile-based systems for tracking inventory, verifying suppliers and enabling customer feedback.

Linking compliance to tangible value: Why register if there is no benefit? Voluntary compliance must unlock access to wholesale markets, municipal services, insurance and credit.

Independence does not mean lawlessness. It means recognising that accountability can exist outside state bureaucracy – and often does. The formal sector’s job is to strengthen what works, not replace it with systems designed for Sandton.

Building the dual system

South Africa is running two economies but governing them with one rulebook – written for only one. That’s the structural flaw, not the entrepreneurs.

At the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), we are testing a different approach through initiatives like DIME (Digital Innovation for Modernising the “Informal Economy”): experiments in dual-system governance that recognise that two economies need two frameworks, governed with equal respect but different mechanisms.

For decades, economic success has been defined as moving from informal to formal, from survivalist to scalable. But not every entrepreneur wants to “scale up”. Many want stability, community presence and ownership of their time. Progress must be measured in human terms, not just financial ones.

If we want 80% of businesses to register, the answer isn’t lecturing them into compliance – it is redesigning the system so registration adds value through simplified processes, immediate access to credit and procurement, and tax regimes that recognise micro-enterprise realities. 

Ironically, the formal economy has much to learn from the independent one: agility, community capital, cash discipline and resilience without bailouts. These are not lessons of charity but of competitiveness.

South Africa’s future will not be built by dragging the independent economy into the formal one. It will be built when formal systems recognise alternative forms of accountability, governance and trust.

The new social contract is not about inclusion, it is about parity. The people driving the independent economy are already saving themselves. We are the ones playing catch-up.

The story isn’t that 80% of township businesses are unregistered. It is that they built a R1-trillion economy without the infrastructure, financing or policy support the formal economy takes for granted. Imagine what South Africa could become if the system finally worked for them, not against them. DM

Maxwell Gomera is the resident representative of UNDP South Africa and director of the Africa Sustainable Finance Hub.

Miles Kubheka is the founder of the Wakanda Food Accelerator and a partner in UNDP’s Digital Innovation for Modernising the Informal Economy (DIME) initiative.

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  "contents": "<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-2919513\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/label-Op-Ed-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"2560\" height=\"253\" /></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Standard Bank recently released its inaugural </span><a href=\"https://www.standardbank.co.za/static_file/South%20Africa/PDF/Township/Standard_Bank_Township_Informal_Economy_Report_October_2025.pdf\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Informal Economy Report</span></a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, saying “</span><a href=\"https://www.standardbank.co.za/southafrica/news-and-media/newsroom/80-percent-of-township-businesses-unregistered-reveals-standard-bank-inaugural-informal-economy-report\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">80%</span></a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> of township businesses are unregistered”. It’s a striking statistic, but also a symptom of how we still talk about township entrepreneurs instead of with them.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Words shape worlds. Calling 80% of entrepreneurs “informal” suggests deficiency. In policy language, it codes for “less than” – a bias that seeps into laws, lending and public attitudes. </span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It implies that the people building South Africa’s most dynamic local markets are somehow incomplete, waiting to be fixed, registered or rescued.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">But informality in South Africa isn’t a moral failure. It’s a structural adaptation. Registration is </span><a href=\"https://www.harbourassociates.co.za/seo-blog/general-business/how-much-does-it-cost-to-register-a-company-in-south-africa/\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">not prohibitively expensive</span></a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> in rand terms, but the real costs are access barriers (internet, documentation), time away from trading and fear of harassment by authorities. As such, independence becomes rational. Many township businesses stay independent not because they can’t comply, but because formal systems were never built with them in mind.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The report “reveals” what township communities have long known: they are productive, creative and self-financed. The real revelation is for the formal sector, which is only now noticing the </span><a href=\"https://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/P0211/P02114thQuarter2024.pdf\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">R1-trillion economy</span></a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> – nearly 19.5% of South Africa’s total employment – it has historically ignored.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">What we call the “informal economy” is, in truth, the independent economy: millions of entrepreneurs who have built systems of production, distribution and trust outside the mainstream. They employ neighbours, circulate cash locally and innovate daily with minimal support. They deserve the same respect we grant corporates: measured not only by tax receipts but by livelihoods sustained and dignity restored.</span></p><p><b>Independence without accountability</b></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">But let us be honest about what independence also means: no food safety inspections, no consumer recourse, no labour protections, fire hazards in densely packed spaza shops and environmental damage from unmonitored waste. </span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">These aren’t abstract risks, they are daily realities that hurt the very communities these businesses serve.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The problem isn’t the entrepreneurs – it is that our regulatory system has only two settings: full compliance or total exclusion. A one-person spaza can’t afford the same health inspection regime as a Shoprite, but it still needs to meet basic hygiene standards.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">So the question is not whether standards matter – they do. The question is: who sets them and who enforces them?</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The answer cannot be “nobody” simply because the current system is unworkable. Independence needs accountability, but accountability designed for micro-enterprise realities, not imposed from corporate templates.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The work, then, is redesigning accountability itself. Here’s where we start:</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Community-based verification: Peer networks that enforce quality and safety standards. Township businesses already police themselves through reputation and community trust. Strengthen these mechanisms without destroying their flexibility.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Tiered regulatory thresholds: Different compliance requirements for different scales. A salon with five stylists should not face the same labour law regime as a mining company, but workers still need basic protections.</span></p><figure style='float: none; margin: 5px; '><img loading=\"lazy\" src='https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/E-gD2Vl7kXOHTzzf9CKqRd3GP-c=/200x100/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg' alt='A general view of informal businesses on September 29, 2020 in Soweto, South Africa. It is reported that a new Township Bill promises to bar foreigners from doing business in Gauteng townships unless they have successfully applied for residency status in South Africa. (Phoo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake)' title=' Informal businesses in Soweto on 29 September 2020. (Photo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake)' srcset='https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/E-gD2Vl7kXOHTzzf9CKqRd3GP-c=/200x100/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg 200w, https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/0wQWGsBs7yxn5uBRCE17XGIOxEs=/450x0/smart/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg 450w, https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/pCr0sfQ9DNo01H2K7qZsSWYPhu4=/800x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg 800w, https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/FWNDqWgpRpaD2e1fXrHTMLMdNKU=/1200x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg 1200w, https://cdn.dailymaverick.co.za/i/dZeQLrQ9NnpQHMunAjCilIFouaA=/1600x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ED_249866.jpg 1600w' style='object-position: 50% 50%'><figcaption> Informal businesses in Soweto on 29 September 2020. (Photo: Gallo Images / Papi Morake) </figcaption></figure><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Digital tools that reduce friction: Mobile-based systems for tracking inventory, verifying suppliers and enabling customer feedback.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Linking compliance to tangible value: Why register if there is no benefit? Voluntary compliance must unlock access to wholesale markets, municipal services, insurance and credit.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Independence does not mean lawlessness. It means recognising that accountability can exist outside state bureaucracy – and often does. The formal sector’s job is to strengthen what works, not replace it with systems designed for Sandton.</span></p><p><b>Building the dual system</b></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">South Africa is running two economies but governing them with one rulebook – written for only one. That’s the structural flaw, not the entrepreneurs.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">At the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), we are testing a different approach through initiatives like </span><a href=\"https://www.undp.org/south-africa/projects/digital-innovation-modernising-informal-economy-dime\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">DIME</span></a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> (Digital Innovation for Modernising the “Informal Economy”): experiments in dual-system governance that recognise that two economies need two frameworks, governed with equal respect but different mechanisms.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For decades, economic success has been defined as moving from informal to formal, from survivalist to scalable. But not every entrepreneur wants to “scale up”. Many want stability, community presence and ownership of their time. Progress must be measured in human terms, not just financial ones.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">If we want 80% of businesses to register, the answer isn’t lecturing them into compliance – it is redesigning the system so registration adds value through simplified processes, immediate access to credit and procurement, and tax regimes that recognise micro-enterprise realities. </span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Ironically, the formal economy has much to learn from the independent one: agility, community capital, cash discipline and resilience without bailouts. These are not lessons of charity but of competitiveness.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">South Africa’s future will not be built by dragging the independent economy into the formal one. It will be built when formal systems recognise alternative forms of accountability, governance and trust.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The new social contract is not about inclusion, it is about parity. The people driving the independent economy are already saving themselves. We are the ones playing catch-up.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The story isn’t that 80% of township businesses are unregistered. It is that they built a R1-trillion economy without the infrastructure, financing or policy support the formal economy takes for granted. Imagine what South Africa could become if the system finally worked for them, not against them. </span><b>DM</b></p><p><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Maxwell Gomera is the resident representative of UNDP South Africa and director of the Africa Sustainable Finance Hub.</span></i></p><p><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Miles Kubheka is the founder of the Wakanda Food Accelerator and a partner in UNDP’s Digital Innovation for Modernising the Informal Economy (DIME) initiative.</span></i></p>",
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  "summary": "In a country where 80% of township businesses are dubbed \"informal\", the real shocker isn't their unregistered status but rather the outdated notion that these vibrant entrepreneurs are waiting for a bureaucratic rescue instead of thriving on their own terms, proving that independence doesn’t equate to lawlessness, it just demands a smarter, more tailored approach to accountability.",
  "introduction": "<ul><li>Standard Bank's Informal Economy Report reveals that 80% of township businesses are unregistered, highlighting a systemic bias in how we perceive township entrepreneurs.</li><li>The term \"informal economy\" suggests deficiency; however, many entrepreneurs thrive independently due to structural barriers and a lack of supportive systems.</li><li>Accountability must be redefined for micro-enterprises, incorporating community-based verification and tiered regulations that respect the realities of township businesses.</li><li>A dual-system governance approach is essential for recognizing the value of both formal and independent economies, fostering innovation and resilience without imposing one-size-fits-all regulations.</li></ul>",
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    "search_title": "Township entrepreneurs who built a R1-trillion economy deserve parity",
    "search_description": "The millions of entrepreneurs in the independent (informal) economy who have built systems of production, distribution and trust outside the mainstream deserve the same respect we grant corporates.",
    "social_title": "The township entrepreneurs who built a R1-trillion economy deserve accountable parity — now",
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Comments (2)

Love JHB South Oct 31, 2025, 08:45 AM

What an absolutely brilliant article. I have a large number of very small SME clients who absolutely battle in the formal sector. The cost of compliance is very high for the majority of these businesses. It is time “the powers that be” realize that compliance needs to become easier and less costly for smaller enterprises as well as this independent sector.

D'Esprit Dan Oct 31, 2025, 08:50 AM

The informal economy is a staggeringly complex and exciting one, across most of the developing world. It does need some formalisation though, so that it pays an equitable share of taxes, pays for power, water, rates and taxes etc, and protects workers, to spread the burden more evenly. As a small business owner in the formal sector, I have the same compliance requirements as Shoprite or Discovery and would welcome a more nuanced system, rather than one aimed at punishing entrepreneurs.

Lucius Casca Nov 1, 2025, 12:28 PM

I agree with killing the bureaucracy..but the formalisation of the informal sector in order to contribute to social services will be wishful thinking. We have seen this in the taxi industry for decades now.