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Street
vendors and informal trading: Struggling for the right to trade
Winnie Mitullah
Extracted
from Pambazuka News 257
June 01, 2006
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/34802
Negotiations
about international trade tend to have relevance for large firms
or formal enterprises. But, asks Winnie Mitullah, what about the
rights of the large number of workers in African cities involved
in informal trade?
When one hears
the word trade what comes to mind is the large-scale formal traders,
and international trade organizations such as the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) and regional organizations such as the Common Market for Eastern
and Southern Africa (COMESA). While such traders and institutions
are important, street vendors and informal trade, which provides
employment and incomes to a significant percentage of people in
Africa, in particular within the urban areas, hardly comes to mind.
Street and informal
traders fall within the informal economy sector. The sector comprises
one half to three quarters of non-agricultural employment in developing
countries. Specifically, these figures amount to 48% of non agricultural
employment in Africa, 51% in Latin America, 65% in Asia, and 72%
in Sub-Saharan Africa, excluding South Africa. Employment in this
sector operates without contracts, worker benefits or social protection,
and most employees and individuals have no rights to organize and
be represented.
The theme of
the UN-HABITAT Global Campaign on good urban governance is the 'Inclusive
City'. The campaign advances the position that an inclusive approach
must be used for balancing, reconciling and trading off competing
interests and priorities. In most cities the interests of micro
and small enterprises such as street and informal traders are competing
with those of medium and large-scale enterprises, with the former
being disadvantaged. All types of enterprises in urban areas, whether
micro, small, medium or large, should have the right not only to
the Central Business District (CBD) but to all urban goods and services.
The global campaign has noted that the notion of inclusion has different
resonances in each region with exclusion of specific groups being
most significant in some regions and exclusion of the poor majority
more important in others. The campaign urges actors to discuss the
question of 'who' in a particular city is excluded from 'what' and
'how'. This article demonstrates how street and informal traders
are not integrated in urban planning and development.
Concepts such
as participation, empowerment, and social inclusion have become
buzzwords, and yet to the poor who are engaged in informal economic
activities the concepts do not make much sense. In the usage of
these concepts, emphasis is often placed on participatory development,
and participatory political processes, rather than participatory
market processes. Further, the proponents of democratic practices
tend to focus on political democracy to the neglect of economic
democracy, while the proponents of empowerment and voice tend to
focus on individuals rather than collectivities. Street and informal
traders are still to fully adopt joint action in dealing with urban
authorities.
The human rights
organizations responsible for the clamour for rights are still to
adequately specify what they mean by economic rights or adequately
strategise about how to claim or enforce worker rights. Even the
micro financial institutions, whose clients work mainly within the
informal economy, have focused on financial services to the neglect
of other business services and of how the wider policy and regulatory
environment affects their clients. Most vendors rely on money-lenders
or informal sources of credit in order to buy their merchandise.
As a result, they pay exorbitant interest rates, and their businesses
rarely grow beyond subsistence levels.
The Bellagio
International Declaration of Street Vendors of November 1995
urged governments to develop national policies for hawkers and vendors
by making them a part of the broader structural policies aimed at
improving their standards of living by giving them legal status,
issuing licenses and providing appropriate hawking zones in urban
areas. The declaration further called on governments to integrate
vendors into urban development plans. Since then, a number of global,
regional and local associations have been established to protect
the rights of street and informal traders. The global networks include
the Women in Informal Employment Globalising and Organising (WIEGO)
with a secretariat at the Harvard University, MA USA and StreetNet
International with headquarters in Durban, South Africa. StreetNet
has regional and local networks which have begun engaging urban
authorities in policy dialogues, including issues relating to the
right to trade in urban space.
Location
of Trade
Street
vending and informal trade is rampant in most developing country
cities, and is a source of employment and income to a large percentage
of urban households. The trade takes place at strategic points with
heavy human traffic - along main roads, streets, parks, pavements,
within shopping centers, and at prominent corners of streets and
roads where traders are visible to pedestrians and motorists. The
traders use different structures, including mats, gunny bags, tables,
racks, wheel barrows, handcarts, and bicycle seats to display their
goods. Some traders simply carry their commodities on their hands,
heads and shoulders, while others hang their commodities on walls,
trees and fences. An advanced but insignificant group of the traders
construct temporary shades with stands for displaying their goods.
Challenges
of Trade
The
greatest challenge facing street and informal traders is with regards
to site of operation and right to trading space. Most of the spaces
traders occupy are considered illegal since the spaces have not
been set aside for trade. In cases where they are allowed to operate,
the spaces are considered temporary and eviction occurs at the will
of urban authorities. There are various conflicts relating to their
sites of operation. A major conflict often arises when the vendors
are required to move in order to give way for planned development.
This brings them into direct confrontation with urban authorities
and land developers. Most of the spaces the traders occupy have
no tenure, and are not allocated and sanctioned by urban authorities.
At the same time, the traders are also in conflict with formal shop
owners and landlords who contend that the traders infringe on their
businesses and/or premises.
The spaces occupied
by traders are open and expose traders to harsh environmental conditions.
Most commodities of trade such as fruits, vegetables and clothes
are affected by the harsh environmental conditions, consequently
resulting in loss of earnings to the traders. Overall, street vendors
and informal traders have been noted to be perhaps the most regulated
and least protected. They trade illegally due to lack of recognition
and licenses. The traders are known to identify trading sites on
their own, leaving the urban authorities with few options, which
include eviction, tolerating traders or charging a daily fee without
providing any legal protection.
In cases of
eviction, the traders are often provided with an option outside
the (CBD) where there are hardly any customers. This option is based
on an exclusion framework which reserves the CBD to large scale
traders and businesses which urban authorities argue pay taxes as
opposed to the street vendors and informal traders. This argument
is false, and research has shown that when both daily fees and bribes
to urban authorities are taken into consideration, the urban authorities
collect more from traders than required. Research has further shown
that daily fee charges are more expensive than lump sum payment
for a license. However, the street and informal traders make minimal
profit and are not able to make lump sum payments.
Lack of a street
trading licenses exposes traders to harassment and punitive measures,
including confiscation of goods. During harassment, traders lose
their commodities, with some closing their businesses after losing
their capital goods. Research from a number of African cities reveals
that having a license does not guarantee safety and recognition
by urban authorities. In most cases, vendors are not issued with
any identification showing that they have a legitimate right to
sell their goods in urban streets. This exposes them to harassment,
including confiscation of goods, assault and demands for bribes.
Until the dawn
of governance reform programmes in Africa, licenses were largely
commodities of trade peddled by either urban authority officials
or those who had access to the urban authorities. This outcome is
attributed to planning laws, which do not take into account the
existence of street vendors and informal traders. In most cases,
such planning laws locate the traders on the peripheral areas of
the city where there is no business, without any consultation. The
experience across Africa shows that traders never stick to such
areas. They drift back to the centre, resulting in punitive measures
from the city authorities. Most of the policies and regulations
being enforced on street and market traders owe their origin to
colonial policies, which were retrogressive with regards to small
scale local enterprises. Street and informal traders require laws
that recognize their economic activities as an important component
of the urban economy, and ensure their right to trading space.
Apart from the
right to trading space, street and informal traders are also disadvantaged
in the area of security, transport and municipal services. A secure
working environment is a pre-requisite for any type of business.
Security is a major concern for many people engaged in economic
activities on streets. Municipal authorities have been the major
source of insecurity for these traders. The authorities harass,
beat and confiscate goods of street vendors without any warning.
This does not only threaten the security of vendors but also their
customers. A study of cities in South Africa has noted that an insecure
environment results in loss of customers, frightens tourists, cripples
business, reduces incomes, and generally interferes with trading.
The insecurity
in the streets is sometimes used as an excuse for evicting street
traders. In many cities in Africa, trading spaces of street and
informal traders are viewed by urban authorities as dens for thugs
and robbers. In 2001 Kampala Municipal Authority used an increase
in city theft and insecurity as grounds for evicting vendors from
streets. While it may be true that criminals mingle with traders,
an assumption that street vendors and informal traders are criminals
is part of a scheme by urban elites to exclude street and informal
traders from the development benefits of cities. A rights perspective
requires urban authorities to identify and deal with culprits as
opposed to condemning a whole sector of an urban economy.
Most vendors
find it difficult to transport their commodities from their homes
and markets to their trading sites. This is because most transport
systems do not service the areas where vendors live, and in cases
where they do, the vendors can hardly afford the service. In some
cases, there are restrictions on what an individual can take on
the bus, mini-bus or train. This forces vendors to carry their goods
on their backs or to hire handcarts or human carriers to transport
their goods. This is complicated further by lack of storage facilities,
which makes the traders carry back to their homes unsold commodities.
Other services
such as water and sanitation are also not available to vendors and
consumers. Apart from a few cities in South Africa, street and informal
traders operate without access to water and sanitation. A few of
them rely on services from the neighbouring formal markets, hotels
and bars; while the majority of vendors rely on unsafe water sources,
unsanitary methods of refuse disposal and use of open spaces as
sanitary facilities. Others obtain services from their homes or
nearby residential areas. Cleansing services provided by urban authorities
are inadequate and do not cover trading areas of street and informal
traders, nor do the urban authorities facilitate the provision of
services by traders and other stakeholders. In cases where traders
are organized, they clean their sites of operation or hire people
to collect and dispose garbage.
The poor, in
particular street and informal traders, are disadvantaged in trade
at global, regional and local levels. Under pressure from rich countries,
the barriers to international trade in goods and financial services
and investment flows have been lowered to the advantage of capital
over labour and of large firms over small and micro firms. The negative
trade and policy processes largely disadvantage the wage workers
and own account producers in the informal economy, and yet they
are the majority poor who are the focus of current policies and
development processes. The neglect of the micro and small traders
has to be reversed if African countries are to change existing poverty
trends.
* Dr. Winnie
Mitullah is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Development
Studies (IDS) at the University of Nairobi.
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