Introduction: The Growth Ceiling of Informality
Across Africa, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are the backbone of economic activity.
They:
- Employ the majority of the workforce
- Drive local commerce
- Power entrepreneurship
Yet a large proportion operate in the informal economy.
From market traders in Lagos to small manufacturers in Nairobi, informal businesses are everywhere, but their growth is often capped.
Informality enables survival, but limits scale.
The transition from informal to formal is not just a compliance exercise. It is a strategic shift that unlocks capital, markets, and long-term sustainability.
1. Why So Many SMEs Remain Informal
Understanding the problem is the first step.
1. Cost and Complexity of Formalization
Registration fees, licensing requirements, and tax obligations can feel overwhelming—especially for small operators.
2. Limited Awareness
Many entrepreneurs are not fully aware of:
- The benefits of formalization
- The steps required
- Available support systems
3. Fear of Taxation
A common concern:
“Formalizing means paying more taxes.”
While partially true, this overlooks the broader benefits.
4. Weak Incentives
In some markets, the perceived advantages of formalization are unclear or delayed.
2. What Formalization Actually Unlocks
Moving into the formal economy changes the game.
1. Access to Finance
Banks and investors require:
- Registered entities
- Financial records
- Governance structures
Without these, funding is nearly impossible.
2. Market Expansion
Formal businesses can:
- Bid for contracts
- Supply large corporations
- Participate in government procurement
3. Legal Protection
Registration provides:
- Contract enforceability
- Intellectual property protection
- Dispute resolution mechanisms
4. Business Continuity
Formal structures allow:
- Succession planning
- Ownership transfer
- Long-term growth
3. The Missing Middle: Why SMEs Get Stuck
Many African SMEs don’t fail, they stall.
They operate in a “missing middle”:
- Too large to remain purely informal
- Too unstructured to access formal opportunities
This gap is often due to:
- Lack of advisory support
- Weak financial management
- Limited governance structures
4. Practical Steps to Formalization
Formalization does not have to be overwhelming.
Step 1: Business Registration
Register with the relevant authority, such as the Corporate Affairs Commission or equivalent national body.
Step 2: Tax Registration
Obtain a tax identification number and understand your obligations.
Step 3: Basic Financial Systems
Introduce:
- Record-keeping
- Simple accounting practices
- Cash flow tracking
Step 4: Open a Business Bank Account
Separate personal and business finances.
Step 5: Build Governance Structures
Even small businesses benefit from:
- Defined roles
- Decision-making processes
- Basic compliance frameworks
5. The Role of Governments and Policy
Formalization is not just a business issue, it is a policy challenge.
Governments across Africa are:
- Digitizing registration processes
- Simplifying tax regimes
- Introducing SME incentives
Frameworks like the African Continental Free Trade Area also create incentives for formalization by expanding access to regional markets.
6. The Role of Advisors and Ecosystem Players
Advisors are critical in bridging the gap between informal and formal.
They help SMEs:
- Structure their businesses properly
- Prepare for funding
- Navigate regulatory requirements
- Build scalable systems
This is where real value is created:
Turning survival businesses into growth businesses
7. The Risks of Staying Informal
Remaining informal may feel easier, but it carries long-term costs:
- Limited access to finance
- Inability to scale
- Exclusion from formal markets
- Higher vulnerability to shocks
In a rapidly evolving economy, informality becomes a competitive disadvantage.
8. Strategic Insight: Formalization Is a Growth Strategy
The most successful SMEs do not formalize because they are forced to.
They formalize because:
they are preparing to grow
Formalization should be viewed as:
- An investment in credibility
- A gateway to opportunity
- A foundation for scale
Call to Action: Move from Survival to Structure
If you are an SME operator:
Start small, but start now.
- Register your business
- Put basic systems in place
- Seek advisory support
- Plan for growth
If you are a policymaker or investor:
- Simplify processes
- Support SME advisory
- Create real incentives for formalization
Because Africa’s economic future depends on SMEs that don’t just survive, but scale.
Conclusion: From Informal Activity to Structured Growth
Africa’s SME sector holds enormous potential.
But unlocking that potential requires a shift:
from informal activity → to structured enterprise
Formalisation is not the end goal. It is the beginning of a new phase, one defined by:
- Access
- Scale
- Sustainability
Those who make the leap will not just grow their businesses, they will help transform Africa’s economies.


