If a large share of small businesses fail, then promoting entrepreneurship without addressing the reasons behind that failure turns Youth Month messaging into repetition rather than resolution. Entrepreneurship becomes the headline, while survival becomes the exception.
Image: IOL / Ron AI
Every Youth Month, South Africa returns to a familiar refrain. Young people are encouraged to be resilient, to innovate, and to start their own businesses.
It is a message delivered with optimism and often genuine intent, but it is increasingly disconnected from the reality young people face in practice.
The challenge is not the message itself, but what is missing behind it.
We cannot continue to tell young people to start businesses in an economy with a persistently high SME failure rate, where global evidence shows that a significant share of small businesses do not survive beyond their first few years of operation.
In many markets, roughly half of SMEs fail in early stages, with survival becoming the exception rather than the norm.
This is where the conversation becomes uncomfortable but necessary. If a large share of small businesses fail, then promoting entrepreneurship without addressing the reasons behind that failure turns Youth Month messaging into repetition rather than resolution. Entrepreneurship becomes the headline, while survival becomes the exception.
Starting a business in South Africa is not the main barrier for young people. Survival after starting is where the real challenge lies.
Many enter markets that are already concentrated, capital intensive, and structurally difficult to access. Established players dominate supply chains, procurement systems are hard to penetrate, and funding models are often misaligned with early-stage risk and cash flow realities.
In this environment, failure is not an anomaly. It becomes the expected trajectory for too many small businesses. The question shifts from why young people are not starting businesses to why we continue to promote entrepreneurship without addressing the conditions that determine whether those businesses survive.
Youth Month conversations must mature.
The issue is not a lack of ambition. It is a mismatch between ambition and infrastructure. We cannot frame entrepreneurship as a simple pathway out of unemployment while ignoring the systems that determine who sustains participation in the economy and who exits early.
If South Africa is serious about youth economic inclusion, the focus must shift from encouragement to enablement.
Procurement systems must open real space for youth-owned SMEs, not symbolic participation but meaningful inclusion.
Funding models must understand early-stage volatility rather than penalising it. Corporate supply chains must actively include emerging businesses instead of treating them as peripheral participants.
Equally important is how success is defined. Not every young entrepreneur will build a high-growth enterprise, but many can build sustainable businesses that generate income, dignity, and local employment. The issue is not that these businesses do not exist. It is that too many are not supported long enough to stabilise, adapt, and grow into viable contributors.
South Africa does not suffer from a shortage of entrepreneurial intent. It suffers from a system that produces high entry and high attrition.
We are producing entrepreneurs faster than we are building environments in which they can survive. This imbalance defines the lived reality of thousands of young business owners.
There is a difference between telling young people to become entrepreneurs and building an economy where entrepreneurship is viable. One is motivational. The other is structural. Without the latter, the former becomes a cycle of encouragement followed by predictable collapse.
Youth Month should not only inspire. It should interrogate why so many SMEs fail, and whether we are comfortable placing the burden of that failure on those who enter the system.
Because ultimately, it is not enough to say young people must start businesses.
We must also confront the reality that too many are being started in systems not designed for survival. Until that changes, entrepreneurship will remain less of a pathway and more of a revolving door.
Zemvelo Ndlovu is a communications and development practitioner focused on SMEs, enterprise development, and inclusive economic growth.
Image: Supplied.
* Zemvelo Ndlovu is a communications and development practitioner focused on SMEs, enterprise development, and inclusive economic growth.
** The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of IOL or Independent Media.