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MORE SOUTH AFRICANS ARE REPORTEDLY TAKING OWNERSHIP OF SPAZA SHOPS AS PRESSURE MOUNTS ON FOREIGN-OWNED BUSINESSES


MORE SOUTH AFRICANS ARE REPORTEDLY TAKING OWNERSHIP OF SPAZA SHOPS AS PRESSURE MOUNTS ON FOREIGN-OWNED BUSINESSES, SPARKING DEBATE OVER LOCAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP, JOB CREATION AND THE FUTURE OF TOWNSHIP ECONOMIES

Reports from several communities suggest that more South Africans are increasingly taking ownership of spaza shops in townships and rural areas, as some foreign-owned businesses reportedly close, relocate, or change ownership amid growing anti-illegal immigration campaigns.

Supporters of the trend argue that it presents an opportunity for local entrepreneurs to enter the retail sector, create jobs, and strengthen local economic participation. However, others have raised concerns about the challenges of maintaining competitive prices, reliable supply chains, and consistent customer service.

The development has sparked widespread debate about entrepreneurship, economic empowerment, immigration policy, and the future of South Africa’s township and village economies.

💬 Do you believe increased local ownership of spaza shops will strengthen South Africa’s economy, or could it create new challenges for consumers and communities? 🇿🇦
In the first place why did locals have to wait to take over what foreigners had created? The same way they failed to create their own business is the same way they will fail to run what was created by foreigners. A Lizard is a Lizard even if you put it on a plane to America it will still land at JFK as Lizard. So, this will not create more job opportunity but more expense to the local coz soon they will be taking long walks to Shoprite.
The local South Africans lack the discipline and skills required to run those small businesses.
They will fail. In the end, there will be no small shops in the neighbourhood.



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