A trader displays her wares during the Sustainable Blue Economy Conference in Nairobi last November. PHOTO | SALATON NJAU | NMG
One reality for those who live in Kenya, and Africa more
broadly, is how vibrant the entrepreneurship space is, and the growing
amount of support targeting the African start-up ecosystem.
Indeed,
a venture investment report indicates that there was almost a fourfold
increase in total start-
up funding received for African start-ups in 2018. The number of funding deals more than doubled and African start-ups raised a record $725.6 million last year.
up funding received for African start-ups in 2018. The number of funding deals more than doubled and African start-ups raised a record $725.6 million last year.
This,
of course, is good news for many businesses in Africa for whom a lack
of finance is a key constraint to development and growth.
However,
while the trend in financing is encouraging there is a broader question
as to whether all these start-ups will be able to scale and grow, given
aggregate demand issues in Africa.
Aggregate demand is
the total demand for goods and services within a particular market.
Brookings Institution states that with regards to Africa, while the
economies have improved their general macroeconomic conditions and
performance, the continent is not creating enough wealth and jobs at a
pace that can make significant inroads into sustainably and
substantially reducing poverty.
That said, if you look
at growth in the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, this stood at
about $1,574 in Africa in 2017 and grew at about 1.85 percent between
2000-2017. This means not only are there more African consumers, the
income available for each African to buy goods and services is also
slowly growing. The combination of growth in population and a growth in
GDP per capita makes Africa a fast-growing market, in principle.
However,
there are two key factors that affect the increase in GDP per capita
consumption and, therefore, lived aggregate demand.
Basic goods
The first is inequality — and here Africa has serious problems.
The UNDP points out that 10 of the 19 most unequal countries globally
are in sub-Saharan Africa. Thus, although incomes may be growing as a
whole in Africa, far too many still live in poverty and often cannot
afford basic goods and services.
As a result,
businesses in Africa are fighting for a fairly limited number of
Africans to buy goods and services and this competition for African
pockets will invariably inform the ability of thousands of start-ups in
Africa to scale and grow.
Secondly is that fact most
African countries have no social safety net. The aggregate demand that
could be generated by incomes of those with stable and regular income,
the African middle class, is diluted by meeting the basic needs of loved
ones in poverty and low-income bands.
Thus, while the
African middle class may have the propensity to consume, the reality is
that their spending decisions are informed by meeting the needs of
others, as they are the social safety net for millions of Africans. This
then raises questions as to how the African middle-class balance the
diversion of income from what they view as important support to others,
with directing that spending to new goods and services offered by
start-ups.
In short, Africa is a growing market but
there are structural issues with regards to whether incomes translate to
new purchases given the structural features of the continent’s economy.
It is important that new entrants into Africa, are clear as to which
income segment is their target and the extent to which inequality and
strained middle-class pockets will inform the uptake on new goods and
services.
No comments:
Post a Comment