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Alternative contracting for informal economy financing

The informal economy in South Africa is a source of considerable debate. Academics and practitioners struggle to define, characterize, measure and place the informal economy in South Africa's macroeconomic picture. Despite the polemic, it is generally agreed that the informal economy is important. E...

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Main Author: Liles, Scott Day
Other Authors: Hartzenberg, Trudy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Liles, Scott Day
author2 Hartzenberg, Trudy
author_browse Hartzenberg, Trudy
Liles, Scott Day
author_facet Hartzenberg, Trudy
Liles, Scott Day
author_sort Liles, Scott Day
collection Thesis
description The informal economy in South Africa is a source of considerable debate. Academics and practitioners struggle to define, characterize, measure and place the informal economy in South Africa's macroeconomic picture. Despite the polemic, it is generally agreed that the informal economy is important. Every collection of ideas regarding the South African economy includes some thoughts on the informal economy. The compelling point is that these thoughts are generated in a wide variety of disciplines. The informal economy features in collections addressing economics, politics, history, urban planning and even literature. Christian Rogerson and Eleanor Preston-Whyte' s recent collection, "South Africa's Informal Economy", is testament to the broad application of the informal economy. Beyond the debate of definitions and characteristics is the debate on how to assist the informal economy. Leiman suggests that one of the major constraints on the informal economy is "blocked access”. Blocked access refers to limited access to product and factor markets. In the case of the informal economy this reference means limited access to raw materials, skills and capital. In South Africa the limited resources directed to informal economy activity can be largely attributed to past government policies that were hostile to the informal economy's existence and development. As such, the role of informal economy development was left to non-governmental and welfare organizations.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38776 Alternative contracting for informal economy financing Liles, Scott Day Hartzenberg, Trudy economics The informal economy in South Africa is a source of considerable debate. Academics and practitioners struggle to define, characterize, measure and place the informal economy in South Africa's macroeconomic picture. Despite the polemic, it is generally agreed that the informal economy is important. Every collection of ideas regarding the South African economy includes some thoughts on the informal economy. The compelling point is that these thoughts are generated in a wide variety of disciplines. The informal economy features in collections addressing economics, politics, history, urban planning and even literature. Christian Rogerson and Eleanor Preston-Whyte' s recent collection, "South Africa's Informal Economy", is testament to the broad application of the informal economy. Beyond the debate of definitions and characteristics is the debate on how to assist the informal economy. Leiman suggests that one of the major constraints on the informal economy is "blocked access”. Blocked access refers to limited access to product and factor markets. In the case of the informal economy this reference means limited access to raw materials, skills and capital. In South Africa the limited resources directed to informal economy activity can be largely attributed to past government policies that were hostile to the informal economy's existence and development. As such, the role of informal economy development was left to non-governmental and welfare organizations. 2023-09-19T11:07:51Z 2023-09-19T11:07:51Z 1992 2023-09-19T11:07:30Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38776 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle economics
Liles, Scott Day
Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
title_full Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
title_fullStr Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
title_full_unstemmed Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
title_short Alternative contracting for informal economy financing
title_sort alternative contracting for informal economy financing
topic economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38776
work_keys_str_mv AT lilesscottday alternativecontractingforinformaleconomyfinancing