Bangkok Post

African economic growth rides on wireless rails

- MATTHEW A WINKLER BLOOMBERG VIEW ©2017

In Kenya, hundreds of thousands of people are rising out of poverty as mobile-money services turn subsistenc­e farmers into business people. A similar dynamic drives Ethiopia, the fastest-growing economy in Africa, where the gross domestic product is forecast to climb 8% in 2019. Borrowing costs in Ghana plummeted almost 2.5 percentage points during the past 12 months amid an unpreceden­ted gain in GDP that’s been led by the growth of the telecom industry.

From the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, handheld phones are letting people become their own ATMs, increasing economic activity by enabling payments for food, travel, school and business. Wireless communicat­ion is driving economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa much as the railroad did in the 19th-century US, accounting for almost a tenth of global mobile subscriber­s and a growth rate that’s beating the world.

The transforma­tion is reflected in the more than 1,300 publicly traded companies that make up corporate Africa. The value of communicat­ions firms increased during the past five years to 25% of the total market capitalisa­tion of African companies, up from 16%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Materials and energy, the natural-resources benchmarks that defined the region since its colonial days, diminished to a combined 18% from 27% during the same period.

Nowhere is the trend more pronounced than in Ghana, where the value of products and services produced by the informatio­n and communicat­ion sector surged 239% since 2012, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, by far the fastest growth of any economic sector. Such explosive growth helped Ghana improve its creditwort­hiness and lower the average cost of public and private borrowing to 6.7% from 9.1% during the past 12 months. The economy continued to expand at a rate of 6%, and economists surveyed by Bloomberg say it will grow another 6.7% next year, almost double its 3.5% rate in 2016.

Both the region and the industry are benefiting. Kenya-based Safaricom isn’t the biggest of the world’s telecommun­ications giants — its annual sales are about 3% of the average of the world’s 60 largest carriers. But its products and services are changing Africa, boosting its bottom line and attracting global investors. Analysts say that Safaricom’s revenues will rise 10% next year, more than triple the average of those 60 telecommun­ications giants, after a sales increase of 13% in 2016.

The company is more profitable than most of its 60 global peers, turning every US$100 (3,300 baht) of revenue into $23 of net income in 2016, twice the average. While its shares have gained 104% since 2014 — more than four times the group average — Safaricom still trades at a 33% discount to its global rivals on price to earnings, according to Bloomberg data.

Safaricom’s mobile-money transfer service, M-Pesa, launched in 2007, now has more than 25 million users in Kenya, a country where 80% of the population lives beyond the reach of the electric grid. A 2016 study credited M-Pesa with increasing daily per capita consumptio­n levels of about 2% of Kenyan households that had been subsisting on less than $1.25 per day.

The study, by Tanveet Suri, an associate professor at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management and William Jack, an economist at Georgetown University, shows mobile-money services ease extreme poverty by enabling men and women to produce and sell goods and services in self-designed markets beyond the boundaries of their subsistenc­e farms. The developmen­t is especially useful for women seeking financial independen­ce in male-headed households, Ms Suri said.

Sub-Saharan Africa by the end of 2016 had 420 million unique mobile subscriber­s, equivalent to a 43% penetratio­n rate in the world’s fastest-growing region, according to the London-based GSMA trade associatio­n of 800 mobile operators. Less than a fifth of individual­s younger than 16 (who account for more than 40% of the population across the continent) have a mobile subscripti­on, GSMA says. That’s why investors anticipate escalating earnings. Mobile technologi­es and services generated $110 billion in subSaharan Africa, equivalent to 7.7% of GDP, and supported 3.5 million jobs last year.

Nowhere is the demography more favourable to mobile money. Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa include 420 million people, or 41% of sub-Saharan Africa and 6% of the world. The total GDP of these countries is $936 billion, or 66% of the region. The population younger than 15 in these five countries ranges from 28% to 44%, compared to 25% for the world, 19% for the US and 17% for China.

Visa Inc, the world’s largest payments network, said this year that it is planning to expand its mobile-phone applicatio­n, mVisa, with lenders in 10 sub-Saharan markets, Bloomberg reported. At the same time, Shenzhen-based Huawei Technologi­es Co, said it is working with London-based WorldRemit Ltd, the money-transfer operator, to enable African expatriate­s to send cash home to more than 100 million users of the Chinese company’s mobile-money service platform.

At a point when mobile phone penetratio­n is 65% for the world, sub-Saharan Africa’s 43% rate is why telecom investors are making the region their favourite. Matthew A Winkler is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is the editor-in-chief emeritus of Bloomberg News.

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