Sunday Tribune

SA named an entreprene­urial front runner

- Joseph Booysen

SOUTH AFRICA has been named one of sub-saharan Africa’s entreprene­urial front runners after a global report placed it in second place, after African counterpar­t Botswana.

According to the Entreprene­urial Ecosystem of South Africa: A Strategy for Global Leadership report released this week by the Global Entreprene­urship and Developmen­t Institute, South Africa’s entreprene­urs continued to make good strides with entreprene­urial activity.

The report was commission­ed by the Allan Gray Orbis Foundation and the South African Breweries Foundation in order to better understand the role that entreprene­urship is playing in the country.

The intention was also to benchmark South Africa globally, look at achievemen­ts and strengths, and to assess areas for improvemen­t so as to know how best to guide resources and policy in the coming years.

Position

Anthony Farr, the chief executive for the Allan Gray Orbis Foundation, said: “The report confirms South Africa’s position as an entreprene­urial leader on the continent and provides an insightful road map for us to focus in on those areas that will provide the greatest leverage for accelerati­ng our entreprene­urial ecosystem even further.”

SAB Foundation director Bridgit Evans said the foundation worked with 80 new entreprene­urs every year and had positive experience­s of innovation and growth, along with a well-developed entreprene­urship ecosystem.

“We have struggled to reconcile this with some misconcept­ions regarding South Africa’s lack of entreprene­urship and our perceived poor performanc­e against other countries.

“Along with the Allan Gray Orbis Foundation, we wanted to give an alternativ­e view.

“We are pleased with the results, which show we can congratula­te ourselves and be proud of what has been achieved in the entreprene­urial space, while still being realistic about what needs to improve in order to drive economic growth and job creation.”

The findings highlight South Africa’s positive performanc­e in entreprene­urial aspiration­s, innovation, high growth, internatio­nalisation and risk capital, which are all considered important elements to achieve economic growth in the country.

The report further showed that South Africa provided better conditions for entreprene­urship when compared with 20 other countries with a higher per capita gross domestic product, including Russia, Mexico, Brazil and China.

The report covered 28 countries in the African region, which amounted to 54 percent in total, and shows the country’s position globally when it comes to new businesses, competitor position, new businesses offering new products and new businesses using new technology, and ranked the country in the top 25 percent of countries surveyed globally in those areas.

However, stumbling blocks exist, and factors such as finance, skills, access to local and internatio­nal markets, education and the right network needed to be addressed to ensure that South African entreprene­urs were able to grow and thrive, according to the report.

We are pleased with the results, which show we can congratula­te ourselves and be proud.

The report suggested that South Africa needed better, innovative and growth-oriented entreprene­urs, who were motivated to grow and prosper within the South African environmen­t and through constant engagement with the global economy.

Meanwhile, DHL Express recently launched its Growing Beyond Borders entreprene­urial training programme in sub-saharan Africa, an innovative programme specifical­ly designed to help small and medium enterprise­s (SMES) understand the economic potential of internatio­nal trade and the subsequent benefits to their businesses.

Since its launch the programme has been rolled out in Botswana, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia and Madagascar, while the first official session in South Africa will be held in Joburg this week.

John Lucas, the managing director for DHL Express South Africa, said: “If we can empower SMES to seize opportunit­ies, this will further stimulate much-needed economic growth.

“SMES have an advantage over larger, establishe­d companies.”

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