Shifting Gears
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ZCAS University Press, Lusaka, Zambia
Abstract
Transitioning from a predominantly informal economy to a burgeoning digital one has become a central
concern for African governments, including Zambia. Digital enterprises, ICT-enabled commercial ventures
leveraging broadband, mobile, cloud, and other internet-based technologies are emerging across the
continent’s economic, social, and political spheres. This study examines Zambia’s informal sector, outlining
its longstanding role and the obstacles it faces in formalizing, then explores how the adoption of digital
technologies is fostering digital entrepreneurship and a new wave of digital enterprises. Internal and
international migration contributed to the rapid growth of informal economies in the 20th century.
Informal foreign currency trading evolved into parallel (black) foreign exchange markets in Zimbabwe and
Zambia. Informal economies enabled a growing number of migrant workers to meet their basic needs and
financing costs. Migration also increased demand for small-scale agricultural and construction activities,
which remain important features of informal economies across sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, agriculture,
construction, accommodation, and food sectors already dominate informal enterprises alongside those
provided by non-African migrants.
Description
Book Chapter
Citation
Harvard Referencing
