Taking a long view of investment in African SMEs is important for returns and job creation
Forty-nine countries have signed up so far this year to join the African Continental Free Trade Area, which is the latest contribution to a perennial debate: how to create more jobs on the African continent.
The need to remove all possible impediments to job creation is a very real one. Recent UN forecasts suggest that by 2050, the world will have an extra 2.2 billion people and over half (1.3 billion) will come from Africa. That’s 1.3 billion more people to be fed, housed, educated and trained with skills that will lead to jobs in tomorrow’s economy.
Similarly, the International Monetary Fund predicts that by 2035 the number of Africans joining the working age population will exceed that of the rest of the world combined. This population explosion is either a demographic dividend or millstone, depending on one’s optimism about Africa’s future economic growth.
The debate about job creation and growth in Africa often focuses on trade barriers or the huge investments required in infrastructure and power – typically multimillion dollar projects – that are correctly seen as pre-requisites for Africa to fulfil its potential. The role of private equity also garners much attention, and perceptions about foreign direct investment in Africa can often be dominated by what PE is doing and where.
These factors are all relevant, but too little analysis is done on investment in small-to-medium enterprises – those day-to-day businesses that are the backbone of any economy.
A 2017 World Bank Report noted that SMEs total more than 95 per cent of registered companies worldwide. The ratio for Africa is no different. You can have all the free trade areas and infrastructure you like, but successful economies need successful SMEs.
Unfortunately, SMEs can be seen as risky propositions by commercial lenders in Africa. Banks compete for mass market savings and have extended mobile banking, but this is not matched by dynamism in lending to SMEs. Where lending does occur, it is often at crippling interest rates of up to 20 per cent.
PE has invested heavily in Africa, but this form of investment tends to overlook SMEs due to stringent qualifying criteria related to enterprise track records and the nearterm pressure on PE to profitably exit from investments.
As ubiquitous as SMEs are, and as talented as their management teams can be, they are inevitably more inclined to the nuances of doing business in the local African context, which doesn’t necessarily gel with the requirements of an overseas PE financier.
It could be argued that a policy of flexible and patient capital is required towards African SMEs. This does not mean an interminable delay in a return on investment to investors, rather that foreign investors need to take a long-term view of the African country and SMEs they select to invest in.
Investors should take into account factors such as first-mover advantage, existing competition and government incentives. Historical performance in other business areas can also indicate potential. If an opportunity makes good business sense but company leadership is weak, a financier could decide to strengthen the management team.
Patience also means investors take time to understand the environment their SME operates in and the challenges faced, such as infrastructure deficiency and precarious power supply. SME management may be resourceful in handling the challenges of a local environment, but they may not necessarily be in the mould of Western European skills. Releasing the potential of African SMEs is crucial to creating jobs for those 1.3 billion new entrants to the African economy.
If local banks and the international PE model aren’t sufficient, there is a huge opportunity for enlightened Middle East investors to fill the void. This may require some careful hand-holding for those entering previously uncharted regions or new fund structures that are more SME-focused than the average international PE fund.
The hand-holding in this context will involve building trust which has been cited as an issue holding back Middle Eastern investors from exploring SME opportunities in Sub-Saharan Africa. It will not happen overnight and will require patience, perseverance and goodwill from either side.
To date, capital invested by Gulf countries in Africa has been gradually increasing, mostly driven by the region’s geographical proximity to East Africa.
Time will tell how significantly Middle East investors with a flexible and patient view take the plunge, or, whether African domestic lenders will relax their lending practices. But investment in African SMEs must surely happen.