Women selling grains at St Balikuddembe market in Uganda. Women-led
businesses in Africa to get funding over the next decade to increase
their participation in investment. PHOTO | MORGAN MBABAZI | NATION
A new fund targeting women-led businesses in Africa will invest
up to $500 million over the next decade to increase their participation
in investment.
The African Women’s Leadership Fund is a
brainchild of the United Nations Economic Commission on Africa (Uneca),
UN Women, the African Union Commission and the African Women Leadership
Network.
Uneca executive secretary Vera Songwe said
that the Fund’s sponsors hope to address a significant gender imbalance
in finance and investment.
“Women are less represented
in many organisations and very few are leaders. This in turn makes them
less represented in key decision-making for the continent,” said Ms
Songwe.
In Africa, only five per cent of chief
executives are women; 18 per cent of businesses lack women in senior
roles; only 29 per cent are senior managers while 44 per cent of women
hold line roles, a 2016 report by Mackinsey & Company notes.
The
fund’s strategy is to ensure that at least 65 per cent of its
investment capital reaches women entrepreneurs and women-led companies.
The rest — 35 per cent — will go to technical assistance in the form of
capacity building, leadership training, mentorship and business
development.
The fund hopes to find emerging women managers who will
eventually serve as examples of the potential that they and their peers
could have if given the support they need.
The fund
covers each of the continent’s five regions — North Africa, East Africa,
Central Africa, West Africa, and Southern Africa — and will evolve over
time to address the unique traits of each market and reflect each
region’s priorities as they change.
According to Ms
Songwe, the success of the fund will lead not only to economic
empowerment of African women, but also contribute to increasing their
role across all aspects of the continent’s development, including
politics, civil society, education, science and technology.
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