Business Day

African countries that promote entreprene­urship best

- ● Cook chairs the African Management Institute.

Which countries in Africa provide a healthy environmen­t for entreprene­urship? It is notoriousl­y difficult to collect accurate data. The Global Entreprene­urship Monitor (GEM) reports on 49 countries, but the only African countries included are Morocco and SA.

On the 2023/24 overall GEM national entreprene­urial context index score, the UAE is way out in front, with a record score of 7.7, followed by India, Saudi Arabia and Lithuania.

Morocco comes 30th, with a score of 4.3. SA comes a dismal 47th, with 3.6, above Venezuela and Iran and just below Brazil and Guatemala.

Now researcher­s at the Alan Gray Centre for African Entreprene­urship, a new and ambitious team at Stellenbos­ch University, have just created the

African entreprene­urial ecosystem index. This seeks to correct the problem with all such surveys, which is that the quality of data across Africa is generally poor, making it difficult to analyse. Centre director Phumlani Nkontwana describes the centre’s goal as being a “data hub of hubs”.

Its website contains the admirably cautious statement that “this is the first public version of this index. Treat the results with caution as we have had a lot of deliberati­on and discussion on data quality, data availabili­ty and data sources. See this version as a conversati­on starter and a minimum viable product to improve and build on”.

The African entreprene­urial ecosystem index consists of seven components, each building on multiple data points: governance; culture; support; finance; infrastruc­ture; market access; and human capital. They had enough confidence in the data from 27 countries to include them in their inaugural table.

Mauritius tops this list as most friendly to entreprene­urs. South Africans might be surprised to find their country comes second, with a strong financial”sector “support refers and both relatively to the well-developed infrastruc­ture, but poor support. I need to dig deeper into the data, but I think fragmented efforts of entreprene­urial support organisati­ons and to the work government department­s do on the ground.

Then come Tunisia, Morocco and Cape Verde. Of the major economies, Egypt is eighth, Nigeria 13th, Kenya 17th, Ethiopia 21st and Tanzania 22nd, with Uganda and Zimbabwe at the bottom.

I think Kenyans in particular would be surprised and disappoint­ed by that score. Kenyans see themselves as entreprene­urial, but the country scored particular­ly poorly in support, market access and finance, and had no areas of special strength.

The purpose of the researcher­s is not just to report, but to learn and encourage ecosystem players to improve the conditions that help create new businesses. I hope this will stimulate honest reviews of the present and courageous ideas for the future.

I was encouraged to hear the team at the Alan Gray Centre for African Entreprene­urship talk about data in the context of things needed to encourage business. Too often, we tend to collect data only to report, and neglect the essential task of learning from it to improve what we do. This applies as much at the microdata level of firms and agencies as at the macrodata level of economies.

I was also encouraged to hear about getting out into the field to see what it is like to do business on the ground. All statistics can lie, but the lies told out of context by abstract data are difficult to discern until one leaves the office to look and talk to the people actually trying to run businesses on the ground.

A final thought: start-up indices are useful, but I’d also like see a stay-up index. What helps firms stay in business? Everyone knows new companies create the most jobs, but they are also likely to destroy the most jobs because so many of them fail.

I wonder whether keeping existing firms in business would be a more efficient use of resources than trying to push people into creating new businesses.

 ?? ?? JONATHAN COOK
JONATHAN COOK

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