Businesses that have recently ventured into East Africa hoping to cash
in on a steadily expanding middle class may have to revise their
expectations because the expansion was grossly exaggerated, warns a new
report. TEA GRAPHIC
By JOSHUA MASINDE Special Correspondent
In Summary
- The 11 African countries under study — Angola, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia — were found to have only 15 million middle-class households, up from 4.6 million in 2000 and 2.4 million in 1990.
- Afrika Investment Bank chief executive Paul Mwai said the informal nature of Africa’s economies presented a big headache over the accuracy of available data but said businesses should draw comfort from demographics.
- The report classifies household incomes into four groups using the Living Standard Measure, which uses the level of spending rather than income as a measure of affluence.
Businesses that have recently ventured into East Africa hoping to cash in on a steadily expanding middle class may have to revise their expectations because the expansion was grossly exaggerated, warns a report.
More people across the region have poor household
incomes compared with other regions, according to a report by Standard
Bank, making the business plans of realtors, retailers, luxury brands
and wealth managers a touch ambitious.
“The bulk (at least in terms of the number of
households) of Africa’s consumer opportunity, particularly for
fast-moving consumer goods firms looking towards the continent, resides
within the base of the pyramid market,” said the report, Understanding Africa’s Middle Class.
It shows that of the approximately 110 million
households studied across 11 countries, 94 million (or 86 per cent) of
them were located in the low-income category, suggesting poverty levels
are as much as two times the figures shown in official records.
Afrika Investment Bank chief executive Paul Mwai
said the informal nature of Africa’s economies presented a big headache
over the accuracy of available data but said businesses should draw
comfort from demographics.
“The middle class may be smaller or bigger than
previous estimates, but it is growing rapidly due to a relatively young
population that is driving consumption levels. Some of the key sectors
that are being driven by a growing middle class are housing, clothing
and automobiles,” Mr Mwai said.
The 11 African countries under study — Angola,
Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Sudan, Sudan,
Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia — were found to have only 15 million
middle-class households, up from 4.6 million in 2000 and 2.4 million in
1990.
The report is intended to provide a rough idea of
the scale, growth and prospects of income growth across some of the
continent’s most alluring economies, giving multinational corporations
the context for engaging with frontier African opportunities.
The report showed that poverty was reducing at a
slower pace in countries in East Africa in the past quarter century
compared with other countries like Angola, Nigeria and Ghana.
What could further dampen global investor appetite
for the previously thought to be fast growing middle class in the
region is the fact that as many as nine in 10, or 126 million of the 140
million East Africans live below the poverty line.
“There has been little change in the composition
of Uganda’s population in income terms in the past decade. Today, 90 per
cent of the population lives on or below the poverty line – down from
95 per cent of the population in 2000,” the report says.
In Kenya, the rate of household transition out of
poverty has remained sluggish since 1990, when 21.2 million Kenyans (91
per cent of the population then) lived on or below the poverty line.
“Today, 38 million Kenyans (83 per cent of the
population) reside in this band,” the report says, placing 94 per cent
of Tanzania’s population below the poverty line as well.
The report classifies household incomes into four groups using
the Living Standard Measure, which uses the level of spending rather
than income as a measure of affluence.
Low-income people are listed as those spending
less than $5,500 in a year or $15 per day while the lower middle class
spend up to $8,500 annually, or $23 per day.
The middle class spends as much as $42,000 per year or $115 per day and the upper middle class spends more than $42,000 a year.
The report is in sharp contrast to a 2011 African Development Bank’s (AfDB) study — “The Middle of the Pyramid: Dynamics of the Middle Class in Africa”
— which placed people earning between $4 and $20 a day in the middle
class, effectively putting a third of Africa’s population (more than 300
million) in the segment, which by virtue of its disposable income
drives growth.
In April last year, the joint World Bank and International Monetary Fund Global Monitoring Report 2013
put the poor in Kenya at 43.37 per cent of the population and in Uganda
at 38.01 per cent based on a poverty line of $1.25 per person.
The line would have left 67.87 per cent of
Tanzanians in the poor category as well as 63.17 per cent of Rwandans
and 81.32 per cent of Burundians.
The Standard Bank report projects a sluggish drift
out of the poverty trap, with three-quarters of the 160 million
households across the 11 countries expected to be still in the low
income bracket by 2030.
“In the past, the conventional wisdom was that as
many as 300 million Africans are categorised as middle class. The report
points out that investors using an unquantifiable assumption may find
individuals they had thought were middle class were in fact highly
likely to lose that status in any economic shock,” Standard Bank’s
senior political economist Simon Freemantle said.
While efforts by East African economies to improve
living standards of their households have stagnated over the years, the
countries have also fared poorly in the growth of the middle class.
Based on LSM categories, the number of Kenya’s
middle income households has grown threefold in the past 25 years to
400,000 or four per cent of the population, up from 130,000 in 1990 and
190,000 in 2000. By 2030, when Kenya hopes to have attained middle
income status, it is expected the country will be home to 1.1 million
middle-class households or eight per cent of the population then.
Uganda’s middle class, on the other hand, is
classified as “relatively immature” and contains 150,000 households, up
from 37,000 in 2000.
The number is expected to increase fourfold to
around 615,000 households or 5 per cent of the households by 2030, when
the population is expected to be 60 million. The report suggests that
despite relatively robust economic growth, Uganda seems mostly unable to
provide the income support to accommodate its swiftly growing
population.
Tanzania has over 100,000 households in the middle
class, translating into just 1 per cent of the population up from fewer
than 20,000 middle-class households in the year 2000.
By 2030, it is expected that 400,000 households in
Tanzania will join the middle class against the projected population of
80 million people.
Mr Freemantle, who wrote the report, however said investors
should be optimistic given the greater scope for future growth and
movement of low income households into the middle income status.
“The report forecasts acceleration in the accumulation of middle-class households in Africa,” he said.
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