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Women
earn a living through cross-border trading
Saeanna
Chingamuka, Women in Development Southern Africa Awareness (WIDSAA)
Extracted from Gender and Development Exchange Quarterly Newsletter
Issue 39 (July-September 2006)
August 30, 2006
http://www.sardc.net/widsaa/gad/view.asp?vol=49&pubno=39
Janet Mujajati,
54, of Harare, Zimbabwe, is a cross-border trader. She travels to
South Africa at least once a month to go and sell beds preads, seat
covers, cushion cove rs and skirts.
Mujajati has six children (four boys and two girls) whom she has
managed to educate beyond secondary school levels with proceeds
from her business. She has been a cross-border trader since 1992.
Mujajati says
she and her husband, who works for a local private company, would
not have managed to send their children for higher education without
her cross-border trading.
Economic reforms
which have deepened poverty in many southern African countries have
pushed women into income-generating activities such as cross-border
trading.
Mujajati says
trading across borders should be encouraged because it provides
an opportunity for many women in the region to contribute to household
financial resources as well as increasing their financial independence
and their access to, and control over resources.
"My husband's
earnings from his formal employment are inadequate to sustain the
family. But through cross-border trading we can afford a good life,"
Mujajati said.
She said the success
of other women in her neighbourhood inspired her to venture into
cross-border trading. "Their households were flourishing and it
seemed they had eve rything they wanted," Mujajati said. "I there
fo re thought it was a good idea to join other women and try my
luck."
Besides being
able to educate their children, Mujajati and her family have managed
to build a house in one of Harare's high density suburbs, an achievement
she says they would not have accomplished without cross-border trading.
Mujajati's story
represents the situation in many countries in southern Africa where
economic policies have pushed people out of formal employment into
cross-border trading by providing an opportunity to enhance the
economic growth potential.
Informal sector
activities such as cross border trading are increasingly becoming
an important part of survival strategies by families and not just
ways of supplementing income from formal sector employment, therefore
policies and programmes that support this will help allev i ate
pove rty and boost women's income.
While maintaining
that cross-border trading is very challenging especially for women,
Mujajati yearns for the establishment of more programmes to facilitate
the smooth operation of cross-border trading and to ease the challenges
encountered in the business.
Mujajati said
women cross-border traders lack reliable sources of information
on markets and customs regulations, and often rely on other women
traders for socio-economic support and information. "It is a nightmare
for us when sometimes as a result of not being familiar with customs
regulations, we get our hard-earned goods impounded by customs official,"
Mujajati said.
Most women traders
also lack business management skills and have little access to price
and demand/supply information in other markets.
Interviews with
some women traders in Harare revealed that a majority of them have
not heard about the SADC Trade Protocol and do not understand the
protocol's local impact (on themselves). They also do not understand
the implications to their business of the SADC Protocol on the Facilitation
of Movement of Persons.
The Trade Protocol
aims to create a level playing field in trade of goods and services
as well as ensure that there are better conditions to facilitate
cross-border trade.
There is need
to build on existing programmes such as the cross-border traders
associations that exist in many countries in the region to enable
women cross-border traders to obtain the needed information from
fo rmal sources, and supplement the informal information they already
receive from fellow traders.
Cross-border traders
associations have a parallel role to play in raising the concerns
of members and offering information and training to members in business
management skills, such as bookkeeping and marketing.
With the increasing
urbanisation and economic transition in southern Africa, women cross-border
traders should be seen as important in the private sector development
for a number of reasons:
- women's enterprises
contribute to regional and national economic growth;
- women's participation
in the private sector empowers them by increasing their financial
independence and their access to, and control over, resources;
- women are important
contributors to household financial resources; and
- women spend
their enterprise earnings on household goods and services such
as children's education and health.
More business
training programmes that focus on increasing the incomegenerating
opportunities and building the capacity of women cross-border traders
need to be established.
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