Aiding self‐employed car‐washers in the informal sector in Durban
- 1 August 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Development Southern Africa
- Vol. 3 (3) , 500-515
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03768358608439259
Abstract
In the past year, the South African Government has committed itself to ‘developing’ the informal sector as a strategy to ease the unemployment crisis and to aid the underemployed. In this paper, the author examines both the lives of self‐employed car‐washers and car‐washing as an activity within the informal sector. He argues that many ‘marginalised’ people who eke out a subsistence in the lower echelons of the informal sector in South Africa regard themselves as lumpenproletariat (or ‘wage‐labourers‐in‐waiting') and not dynamic entrepreneurs. These people expect the Government to intervene in the process of their transition to proletarianism. Further, activities such as car‐washing offer no prospects for self‐advancement.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- ‘Developing’ the Urban Informal Sector in South Africa: The Reformist Paradigm and its FallaciesDevelopment and Change, 1984
- Nairobi's Informal Sector: Dynamic Entrepreneurs or Surplus Labor?Economic Development and Cultural Change, 1984
- Petty producers and capitalismReview of African Political Economy, 1975