Is there a limit to hustling even as it is celebrated in Kenya?

Opinion
By XN Iraki | Aug 20, 2025

A second hand shoes  trader displays her wares in Nyeri Town ,on 30 December,2023,majority of traders from the informal sectors have termed the year 2023 as worst in the profit making.[FILE/Standard]

Data can be surprising; only about 20 per cent of the South African (SA) economy is informal. In Kenya, it’s 80 per cent.

Driving around South Africa, you easily notice the absence of M-Pesa kiosks, bodabodas, and pimped matatus, as well as hawkers. I only saw one hawker selling sugar cane at a toll station.

South Africa is portrayed as the land of xenophobia, high unemployment, crime and inequality. The truth is deeper. ANC lost its majority due to the perception that it had not addressed these issues adequately.

But give credit, South Africans get free medical care, and subsidised higher education, very close to our old system when we got “boom.”

Even welfare money if unemployed, I heard. Roads, power (forget load shedding) and other services are available even to the poor.

The high unemployment rate is a legacy of apartheid and the slow structural transformation of the economy. Just like in Kenya, the economy did not change overnight because of uhuru. 

Now you got a hint why hustling is subdued in SA. The high level of industrialisation is another reason why hustling is subdued.

Fruits and wine

There are jobs in the manufacturing sector, services and commercial farms. I am sure you see lots of fruits and wine from SA in our supermarkets. 

Hustling is celebrated in Kenya. Even the employed hustle, rare in SA and is discouraged. The key argument for our hustling is that employment never pays enough.

But it’s also a sign of Kenya’s extreme capitalism. And the fact that we are mostly on “our own.”

Our social security is a work in progress, beyond a stipend for the elderly.

More formalisation would lead to higher quality jobs, more tax and possibly welfare for the unemployed.

Informality leaves too many businesses small, employing too few people and paying them too little to improve their livelihood. 

 Which developed country has a big informal sector? More recently, did China or Japan develop through hustling?  

 The road to the formal economy has one big roadblock: politics. In the colonial period, Africans were left at the subsistence level, forbidden to grow cash crops and compete with “white plantations.”

Today, we celebrate what keeps us on the periphery of the formal economy. And we have come to believe it’s normal.

Let’s rethink that economic model and distil off political emotions from it. My visit to SA and developed countries has convinced me that hustling has a limit.  

Share this story
Boniface Muchiri: How football got me out of poverty
Harambee Stars midfielder Boniface Muchiri was raised by a single mother in Nambale, Busia County.
Koech hoping to carry his top form to Tokyo
18-year-old Phanuel Koech will be teaming up with Timothy Cheruiyot and Reynold Cheruiyot.
Harambee Stars' pathway to 2024 Chan final
The tournament pathway means that Kenya can only meet either Tanzania or Uganda in the final, should they get there.
St Joseph's inch closer to retaining hockey gong
JOGA, who are also unbeaten, are in a pole position but they must win against Uganda’s Bweranyangi today and Kakungulu tomorrow to firm grip on their title.
Sudan end long struggle to the quarter-final berth at CHAN 2024
Sudan’s long and difficult road to the knockout stages of the African Nations Championship (CHAN) 2024 finally bore fruit on Tuesday night.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS