Lopes (2007, p.40) explicitly confirms the existence of an informal pre-independence
economy in the city of Luanda. These “informal activities performed a strictly subsidiary
function of the formal sector of the economy, dominant, structuring and endowed with
the indispensable control and regulation mechanisms. The informal economy of Luanda
was restricted to traditional handicraft activities, the provision of services - namely
domestic services -, street commerce, door-to-door commerce, markets in slum areas,
and activities related to the construction of housing for indigenous populations in its
periphery”.
Although there are (naturally) no official statistics that allow the phenomenon to be sized
with absolute precision, the same source, citing data from 1995, states that “the informal
economy of Luanda exclusively ensured the subsistence of 42% of families, representing
56% of the economically active population (population with 10 years of age or older) in
the Angolan capital” (Lopes, 2007, p.39).
Several other studies, cited in the same work, allow us to estimate that the informal
economy represented around 50% of the Angolan non-oil sector in this period, with a
tendency to stabilize around this percentage, despite several increases and decreases to
date.
Outside the informal economy, Rodrigues (2008), using data collected by Rela (1992),
points out that in 1955, three quarters of the 1,810 companies registered in Angola were
linked to agricultural production and semi-artisanal activities, such as mills, bakeries and
joineries. There were no more than 12 industrial companies, almost all located in Luanda.
The same source states that “after the second world war, the increase in the importance
of the port of Luanda - which started to compete with the largest one to date, Lobito -
associated with the increase in commercial activity, made Luanda an attractive place for
the implantation of industry” (Rodrigues, 2008, p.194). According to this work, by 1962
the number of companies operating in Angola had risen to 2,057 (13.64%) and the
number of industrial companies to 19 (58.33%).
In the period between 1962 and 1973, on the eve of independence, “Angola’s industrial
production grew at a very high rate - around 15% per year - and in 1973, industrial
production was linked to the light industry, concentrating on food (27.4%), beverages
(11.3%), textiles (12.4%), chemical industry (11.7%) and the metal-mechanical sector
(6.4%) (Rodrigues, 2008, p.190).
Using data from Ferreira (1999), Rodrigues (2008, pp.190-191) states that when
independence took place, there were 3,846 companies in Angola’s manufacturing
industry. However, external dependence was around 50%, mainly for semi-finished
products and raw materials.
What is not clear, in this analysis, is the weight of entrepreneurship in all this business
activity, due to the industrial and agricultural constraints in the Portuguese empire. In
fact, in this historical period, the business community of the time had little in common
with the one described in the previous historical period.
Another relevant economic element of this period is the widespread use of child labour
in Angola, which grew since the total ban on illegitimate trade and came to support the
development of large extractive activities, namely the diamond sector (Cleveland, 2010).