Special Assistant to Prime Minister for Poverty Alleviation and Social Safety, Faisal Karim Kundi Friday announced that the present government will provide legal status to the street vendors program. He was presiding over a briefing on providing an enabling environment for street vending. Zia Banday, senior fellow Pakistan Institute for Development Economics (PIDE) and focal person of street vendors’ program, gave a detailed presentation on the ongoing program in Islamabad, its challenges and future roadmap. The meeting was attended by Nadeem Afzal Chan, Former PPP MNA and high officials of the ministry along with representative street vendors.
Faisal Kundi said that street vendors are an important part of society and by recognizing them through legislation and regulations we can build our economy. Zia Banday apprised Faisal Karim Kundi about the challenges faced by street vendors. The previous government didn’t provide legal status to Rehri Ban project due to which such a useful scheme had to face a closure in the initial stages, said Faisal Karim Kundi. The present government will provide legal status to the project, he added.
Street vendors discussed their fears and expectations of the vendor’s community with Faisal Karim Kundi.
Kundi assured them full support for the welfare of street vendors. He said that vendors will only welcome this project if legal grounds are provided to the project. This project must be extended to the provincial level, he added.
It was elaborated in the meeting that in comparison to other developing countries, street vendors remained a much neglected segment in Pakistan.
It is left to fend itself on the cost of perpetual squeezing by predators from both private and public entities.
Based upon a PIDE research survey, the street economy of urban Pakistan is conservatively estimated at around PKR 900-1000 billion with up to a million street vendors operating. This is an overwhelmingly cash, unrecorded and informal economy with little graduation opportunities for Bottom of Pyramid (BoP) street vendors. Deprivation of legal status constraint effectiveness of street vending as a viable tool for poverty alleviation, job creation and livelihood for urban poor.
In 2021, Ministry of Poverty Alleviation launched a street vendors’ initiative at limited scale for formalization and financial inclusion of street vendors. Program components enabled over 200-street vendors to acquire eco friendly carts, micro-finance loans and vending licenses. Participating street vendors have organized themselves in an association. —APP