A Shadow Economy:  Women street vendors in Hargeisa and their role in contributing to the Somaliland’s economic development

A Shadow Economy:  Women street vendors in Hargeisa and their role in contributing to the Somaliland’s economic development

Hargeisa, the capital city of Somaliland has been growing for the lasttwo (2) decades. During the reconstruction and re-building of the state, Somaliland continues to remain peaceful.

Prior to the fall of Somalia’s dictatorship government in 1991 and the break-out of the civil war, women’s roles were traditionally tied down to caregivers at home. Men assumed the role of breadwinners in their households, thus catering for domestic expenditures and school fees for the children. Conversely, something changed during the civil war when majority of men were killed in the civil war; a considerable number of women became breadwinners and took over what were patriarchal roles before. As an effect of this role change, poverty and deprivation remained, and continue to be the major challenges that women face– forcing them to economic roles as street vendors or domestic workers for sustenanceof their households.

Conducting business in Hargeisa is a challenge with financial institutions giving limited access to loans especially start-up capital. Additionally, street-vending shunned as a key partof the economy has given the women street vendors’ limited market space to conduct their business – in addition to restricted provisions within the city plan.

In each corner of Hargeisa there are women street vendorsselling food stuffs, milk and second-hand clothes making them an integral part of the informal sector and the country’s overall economic development.

Day after day, a great number of women are penetrating the informal sector as vendors of small businesses due to the recurrent droughts and climate change in Somaliland. The unfortunate outcome of these debilitating droughts, especially to the pastoral and agro- pastoral communities is dead livestock. This has conversely increased the number of displaced communities – where most of them are vulnerable, unskilled women.

Street vendors are a major contributor to the local government’s revenue

Women street vendors continue to play an important role in Somaliland’s economic development thus contributing significantly revenue generation.

A recent baseline survey conducted in November 2017 by SIHA Network outlined that the local budget income per year generated from the informal sector generated 40% to 65% of the total annual revenue, through daily tax collection by the local government of Hargeisa. This represents the role of women street vendors and how they contribute to the overall economy.

 

Fosiya Mohamed Jama lives in Dami village with her eight (8) children. She started vending in 2006, selling perfumes, head cover clothes and uunsi² beside the main road to the city centrein Waaheen Market in Hargeisa. Her daily income is SL 30,000 which is equivalent to $3 US Dollars.  Fosia supports her household through paying her children’s school and university fees, food, rent, electricity among other responsibilities – especially with her husband being sick.

Fosiya pays SL 1000 in taxes per day despite the local government considering her work as non-registered   business trade. During the tenure of her work, she has suffered violations to her rights, physical assaults and harassment by the police and government law enforcement.

Challenges

Although the women street vendorspay their taxes daily, the local government has not been supportive at all in ensuring a safe environment for these women, like Fosiya – who frequently meet challenges not limited to destruction of property, confiscation of their goods and street gang battery.

These women work in a dismal environment with risk to car accidents and health issues due to limited or no access to basic health and hygiene facilities. Aside from their economic challenges, they are also faced with domestic challenges that come as a result of their long absence from home. These challenges include impending marriage separations and break-ups and maltreatment from their spouses.

There is no legal protection offered to the women street vendors except mention of its classification in the Business Classification Law. And that said though, the Local government provides various licenses but the street vending business is not included thus being seen as temporary business and not given license. The question then, is why the local government continues to collect tax from them.

The women street vendors have no access to finance like loans through formal financial institutions like banks – leaving them the tasking, traditional way to borrow from their relatives and families.

Recommendations:

Hence women informal sector have provides for integral party of local government budget SIHA recall to local government to  reshape its  strategies  plan and provides informal women for better place of cleaning market spaces,   and provision of public full support and defined trading space for women street vendors and given them for license.

SIHA Somaliland Project have engaging to  promote women empowerment through building capacity in term of training, like business management, access to financial institution, advocacy and leadership training skills, organize women into networks and group to advocate and engaging women informal sector role. Also promote women access to basic right includes women rights, protection and access to courts also create agent of change for women who   advocate them.

Its very importance all civil societies’ organization, government institutions and financial banks to consider women informal sector and support to avail continue bussing  to growing up.

 

Report- SIHA NETWORK

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¹ Base line survey findings conducted by SIHA Network on November 2017

²Uunsi is a very important part of many Somali homes. It is a way of making your home smell nice and has a very long history in Africa

 

 

 

 

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