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The
folly of African entrepreneurship
Rejoice Ngwenya
June 23, 2010
Zimbabwe, like most developing
African countries burdened with the yoke of authoritarian oppression,
force-feeds citizens with policy prescriptions only meant to satisfy
political egos of ruling elite. Imposing government ministries of
'small and medium enterprises- and 'indigenisation-
would not suddenly turn Zimbabwe into an industrialised country.
Similarly, investing
millions of United States Dollars in education infrastructure to
offer business administration training would by itself not achieve
much in economic growth. It is in this context that my cousin who
teaches block release students of Masters of Business Administration
at a derelict Zimbabwean state university in the midlands city of
Gweru makes a stunning observation about the folly of African entrepreneurship.
Notwithstanding the exploits of world-renown African businesspersons
like Mo Ibrahim [Sudan], Patrice Motsepe [South Africa], Strive
Masiyiwa [Zimbabwe] et al, there is a tendency for emerging economies
to over emphasise the virtues of trading as symptomatic of entrepreneurial
instincts in Africans. Vast flea and vegetable markets in Cairo,
Casablanca, Accra, Nairobi, Lusaka, Harare and Johannesburg cannot
be credible litmus test for successful business, because, according
to my cousin, they do not contribute to real economic development.
This school of thought is supported by 20th Century economist Joseph
Schumpeter.
Zimbabwean ministers
of 'small enterprises- and 'indigenisation-
- Sithembiso Nyoni and Saviour Kasukuwere respectively -
epitomize the flourishing species of authoritarian regime praise
singers who perpetuate the lie that simply buying and selling amounts
to entrepreneurship. Ironically, it is dictators that buy votes
by deceiving citizens into non value adding, non innovative 'income
generating- activities only meant to fill up ballot boxes.
Wikipedia isolates Israel Kirzner as one in a few economists who
associates entrepreneurship with innovation or value addition. Importing
clothes and cars from Dubai and disposing them off to Harare consumers
has no value addition. Countries like Zimbabwe, Swaziland and the
Democratic Republic of Congo are politically unstable, with a productive
industry decimated by decades of senseless dictatorship, yet their
economies are said to have 'survived- because of 'enterprising
and resilient citizens-. What a load of hogwash!
Says Wikipedia: "The
entrepreneur is widely regarded as an integral player in the business
culture of American life, and particularly as an engine for job
creation and economic growth." A country develops while its
economy grows when citizens create new products and services that
result in more people being employed, consuming and adding to the
national fiscus. During electoral campaigns, dictators like Robert
Mugabe splash out computers, buses and money to political sympathisers
under the guise of 'economic development and empowerment-.
As a result of this patronage, the country fails even to produce
cooking oil, soap and shoes because there are no efforts to encourage
sustainable innovation. My cousin therefore is correct that Zimbabwe,
like most African countries suffering from authoritarian dictatorship,
will remain underdeveloped until we transform our political thinking.
No doubt the MBA students
he encounters are victims of an education system that was meant
to produce workers rather than innovators. It is a poisonous system
that infects even financial institutions like Standard Bank Zimbabwe
who seek survival from customers with 'proven- salary
and wages rather than 'risky- entrepreneurship. There
is a link between sustainable entrepreneurship and financing, and
this chain translates into long term survival of the banking sector.
In a 2009 paper entitled "Banking Deregulations, Financing
Constraints and Firm Entry Size" Harvard academics William
R. Kerr and Ramana Nanda quote Michelacci and Silva who stress that
"better financial access explains why local entrepreneurs
operate larger firms..." In other words, the nexus between
finance, entrepreneurship, sustainability and long term growth is
an undeniable fact of life.
The Standard Bank, like
most conservative 'orthodox- commercial banks, has this
skewed policy imprint confusing innovation with entrepreneurship.
And for good reason. The default rate for unsecured loans has been
known to bring down the banking sector. Yet Kerr and Nanda have
it on good authority that restrictive regulations in financing innovation
are a negative force in the economic growth projectile. This is
why it is critically important for us Africans to understand and
appreciate the meaning and implication of true entrepreneurship.
We must exorcise the demon afflicting banks like Standard that only
salary cheques are safe as collateral in securing loans.
At one time in the early
part of this decade, Zimbabwean banks or more specifically the financial
sector, was registering phenomenal 'growth-, yet citizens
were getting poorer and GDP was shrinking. This was prelude to the
'annexation- of banks by Reserve Bank Governor Gideon
Gono, and eventually others collapsed under accusation by [Gono]
of perpetuating impropriety. It was during the same period that
inflation spiralled to six digits while Zimbabwe-s productive
sector almost disappeared. But the strange phenomenon was of a booming
'entrepreneurship- in cross border trade, flourishing
flea markets and countless trips between China, Dubai and Zimbabwe.
In rural areas, young men were digging up the country side to extract
and sell gold. Something was clearly wrong.
I therefore conclude
this treatise by reasserting the need for us Africans to create
new social and business solutions as an entry point to entrepreneurship.
Deficits in public communication, governance, food, education, health,
industry, commerce and infrastructure are an ideal opportunity to
innovate for profit. This is what drives industrialisation, not
selling jeans at open markets or vegetables and curios along the
freeways. Moreover, financial institutions like the conservative
Standard Bank of Zimbabwe defeat the cause of entrepreneurship by
not promoting individual inventors but relying on wage and salary
remittances. At a time when national productive capacity is below
40%, it is difficult to perceive how a serious bank can ignore entrepreneurs
and non-profit organisations on its menu of attracting business.
In its haste to pour scorn on 'flea market entrepreneurs-,
the bank has adopted collective condemnation even of those self-employed
consultants who sustained it with valuable foreign currency deposits
when the Zimbabwe dollar was toilet paper. What is now urgent is
to overhaul Zimbabwean national economic policy to foster a commitment
to innovation rather than flea markets and Chinese toyshops.
Rejoice
Ngwenya is director of Coalition for Liberal Market Solutions and
an affiliate of AfricanLiberty.org
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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