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Mobile Phones in the Transformation of the Informal Economy Stories from market women in Kampala

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(1)

Mobile Phones in the Transformation

of the Informal Economy

Stories from market women in Kampala

b

Jakob Svensson

Malmö University

(2)

Research project studying the roles of mobile phone practices in empowering market women in Kampala

About this study

b

Caroline Wamala Larsson Karlstad University

(3)
(4)

Kampala

(5)

The Study

(6)

The Study

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The Study

(8)

The Study

(9)

The Study

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Informal Street Economies / Markets

Mobile phone (money / banking) visible in the streetscape

(12)

- Economic activities that are unregulated including employment relationships

- Responsible for the wellbeing of 2 billion people worldwide - Cities in the global south

- State’s inability to provide social protection, job security - State’s efforts to curb the growth of the informal economy

Important in

a) academic literature b) policy papers, reports

c) international aid organization

(13)

Forced evictions ordered by city officials Allocating fixed locations – such as markets

Replacing crudely built shacks with modern buildings Taxes

Loan sharks

Owino market has been burned 4 times in 4 years

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Communicating with customers, suppliers, landlords, officials, managing their private lives while trading), managing their saving circles

Mobile money:

Ease of transacting even with distant customers, ease of paying monthly rentals, taxes, transparent and accountable  Street markets transactions moving away from the streets

On the other hand ..

Sim card registration (via mobile money registration: 49 out of 55 countries in Africa had mandatory SIM card registration, Uganda included

 Staggering amounts of personal data accumulated

National ID registration exercises further increase state’s control of citizens

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Veer away from the dichotomies of formal/informal, consider nuances in regulation and state intervention in relation to economic activities

One the one-hand women have become financially included through the semi-informal street market economy and therefore also earn own money. On the other hand these women are pushed into a market liberalism –

underlining individual responsibility and individual solutions to poverty reduction earning a livelihood over structural ones

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Thank You for Listening!

Jakob Svensson

Malmö University

References

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