Research: Mitchells Plain Town Centre – Informal Economy Within a Capitalist System

22 09 2009

A UCT Masters Student Laura Huss has completed the an in-depth research report on the connection between the struggles of the Mitchells Plain Concerned Hawkers and Traders Association (CHATA) and South Africa’s economic system.

For more information on Mitchells Plain CHATA contact Mischka Cassiem 073 128 6657 & 074 525 7336

Contact the researcher, Laura Huss, at 0799 161 025 or MLaura.Huss@gmail.com

ABSTRACT: South Africa has become a player in the international system of capitalism that has enforced a core and periphery model of development. There are various ways to identify the structure of South Africa’s economy, but it cannot be ignored that there are informal and formal sectors that co-exist in creating jobs and income. The informal economy has been questioned all over the world for whom it benefits and fundamentally how it is even defined. This research will explore one area of Cape Town, South Africa: The Mitchells Plain Town Centre, which functions as an informal market for over 1000 traders and hawkers. This market has been subject to much objection by the City of Cape Town and has been under the threat of eviction for over 10 years. In order to understand informal trading in Mitchells Plain, I will question the fundamental structure of South Africa’s capitalist system. This research will attempt to understand the logic of capitalism on a broader scale in order to expose the contradictions for a society attempting to accept both informal economic practices and simultaneously appeal to the world system of capitalism. The analysis will then point to the fact that informal economies make up a large number of livelihoods within South Africa and cannot be ignored for keeping the social and economic system from collapsing.

Informal Economy Within a Capitalist System: A Focus on Mitchells Plain Town Centre in Cape Town, South Africa- Laura Huss





Into the inferno

19 07 2009
by Arundhati Roy
Source: The New Statesman

The Indian government has joined forces with corporate giants to create a police state, making people surrender land and livelihoods at gunpoint. What can we do, now that democracy and the free market are one?

W­hile we’re still arguing about whether there’s life after death, can we add another question to the cart? Is there life after democracy? What sort of life will it be? By democracy I don’t mean democracy as an ideal or an aspiration. I mean the working model: western liberal democracy, and its variants, such as they are. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Gugulethu, Somali traders to hold follow-up meeting

7 07 2009
July 07, 2009 Edition 1
Staff Writer – Cape Times

GUGULETHU and Somali shopkeepers will hold a follow-up mass meeting tomorrowto cement peace efforts following threats to renew the xenophobic violence of a year ago which displaced 20 000 refugees and migrants. Read the rest of this entry »





Movement-building, the capitalist crisis and the South African elections

17 04 2009
Dale T. McKinley (2009-04-16)
Source: Pambazuka
Despite a sense of euphoria among significant sections of South Africa’s poor and working class that a Jacob Zuma presidency will usher in the long awaited better life for all, writes Dale McKinley, socialists know that Zuma will not dismantle the alignment of class forces consolidated by the ANC since the early 1990s, but rather further entrench them. Since social movements are not in a position to present an alternative parliamentary option to the masses, the Anti-Privatisation Forum is calling on communities, workers, the unemployed, youth and students not to vote in the national elections on 22 April 2009, rather than ‘wasting their vote and time on parties that have no intention of bringing about real fundamental changes’ and that do not ‘represent the aspirations and interests of the poor and working class communities’.

Read the rest of this entry »








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