A Historical Note
The idea that the informal sector is the product of the formal
sector failure to meet the demands of surplus labour in the urban areas (Leys
1974) cannot be accepted wholly since womens participation in the sector
has been in existence ever since communities began to organize themselves and
assign roles and tasks to individuals in society according to sex and age (Omari
1989). Under the barter system, for example, women went to the markets to
exchange their farm or non-farm products with other commodities. Normally, the
value and price of the commodity was determined by mutual agreement between the
seller and the buyer of the produces. For example, in traditional marketing
system among the Pare and Shambala societies of North Eastern Tanzania, it was
the task of the women to go to the market to do the transaction. Agricultural
produces such as bananas, vegetables and milk, were controlled and sold in the
market by women. In Mwanga District, handicraft products were the work of women
who also dominated the pottery markets. Some of the men in Usangi became rich
through the development of pottery business at household level (B. Omari 1975).
They sold their produces not only in the local markets, but also to distant
markets in Moshi and elsewhere.
However, as the cash economy penetrated the subsistence economy,
women begun to develop mechanisms to cope with the changes. They had to find
alternatives to enable them play their respective roles better at the household
level. Fortman (1982:194) has suggested that:
while money making opportunities for men are
expanding, women alternatives seem to be narrowing. Thus they are forced to
respond in economic crisis by increasing their economic productivity along the
traditional lives.
The traditional economic activities which women have been
dealing with at household level can be put under three categories:
(i) Production of food and cash crop.
(ii)
Household management, services and care.
(iii) Trade or
business.
While the first two categories of activities have been normally
carried out within the household compound or vicinity, the third category has
involved travelling outside the household. The last category, in the wake of
economic changes and stagnation, has involved non-traditional activities such as
travelling to distant places for trading purposes. In an earlier research (Omari
1989), found that women in Mwanga, Kilimanjaro region, travelled to Taveta in
Kenya, to get commodities for selling in the markets. This involved a trip of
about two days, away from home. As a result, many women are overburdened with so
many household activities, which, according to the division of labour based on
sex, are within their expected roles.
During the period of mass mobilization and awareness creation
among various groups of people for the support of the policy of ujamaa
and self-reliance in the 1970s, a call was extended to the women to
participate in the money economy. The famous statement; Women do not sit
in the economy Wanawake msikalie uchumi in the late 1960s and early
1970s was a call by the government and Party officials to involve women more and
more in the cash economy for they were already involved in numerous economic
activities. The womens power was invoked i order to involve them in the
productive sector. It is doubtful, however, whether during this period in
Tanzania political history, the leadership group had a clear picture of the role
the informal sector was playing in the national economy. It is possible that
they were concerned only with women getting more into the formal sector. Even
those who joined formal employment, have ended up in the low paying jobs (Meghji
1977; Swantz 1985), primarily due to lack of eduction and skills.
Womens participation in the informal sector has been
closely related to the power structure and power relation in society. Such
relations, for instance the call for the women not to sit on the
economy referred to earlier, may be said to have a multi-dimensional
meaning. In Ghana for example, women control the retail business in Kumasi
market. One can miss a spare part in downtown stores, which is readily available
in the Kumasi market. The late Kwame Nkrumar (then head of state of Ghana)
recognized this power the women wielded and successfully used it for political
organisation and mobilisation. Similarly the current head of State, Flight Lt.
Rawlings has recognized this aspect of womens power and used it for his
populist ends. This is why he is popular among the ordinary people in rural and
urban areas.
The call by the Tanzanian politicians that women should not sit
on the economy, is also a recognition of the existence of womens power in
controlling the available resources and space. But one may be tempted to ask:
was the call a way of giving women independence and freedom or was it merely a
political gimmick? Discussing the role of the African women entrepreneur in the
society, Simms (1981:160) has concluded that: The African female
entrepreneur holds a critical position in the internal production and
distribution of goods and services to the consuming public. Did the
Tanzanian politicians recognize this? If one examines the attitudes of many male
politicians towards women, the answer cannot be anything but skeptical.
The economic crisis of the 1980s has forced a number of women
into informal businesses. Whether the call by Tanzanian politicians in late
1960s and early 1970s has added impetus to this move, is unclear. But what is
clear is that the spontaneous social changes that are taking place in the
country have forced women to utilize their creative potentials more positively,
often going beyond their traditionally assigned place and role in society. For
example, according to the 1978 census, out of a total of 5,223,863 people
categorized as self-employed, 2,240,170 (42.88%) were women. Most of them
(87.62%) are still involved in household subsistence related informal economic
activities, and only 12.38% of the women were engaged in non-subsistence
informal economic activities (Kasungu 1990:7).
In her situational analysis of the women in employment, Kasungu
(1990:6) categorizes women in the informal sector in three groups. The first
category includes women who are waged employment but are also involved in the
informal business. The second category is that of relatively rich women
who are in their professions and are highly paid. The third category
includes less educated and poor unskilled women who cannot be employed in the
formal sector. Kasungus categorization could be improved further to show
the class character of the women who, are involved in the informal business as
follows.
First, we have housewives and mothers who are at home but bring
in income from their informal economic activities, which is twice or thrice that
of their husbands/male partners. Secondly, there are employed women who are in
the lower ranks and whose income from official employment is insufficient to
meet the household minimum requirements. Third, there are the high salaried
women who use their offices to run their informal business. These, like their
male counterparts, spend most of their time outside the office doing their
business. Although according to government regulations, these women are supposed
to engage in such activities after office hours, it is difficult to control them
because they have shrewdly divided their time between serving their employers
and doing informal business. Normally this group of women use their offices as a
contact place for their business. (Tripp (1990).
The resulting absenteeism from work places eventually work
against women however. For example, it may allow their male bosses to assess
them negatively, and hence become an impediment to their promotion (Tripp
(1990).
Lastly, there are professional business women who conduct both
the informal and formal businesses without experiencing any
conflict.