Business a.m.

IFC launches $225m platform to strengthen VC ecosystems

- Chisom Nwatu

INTERNA TIONAL FI NANCE COR PORATION (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, is looking to strengthen venture capital ecosystems and invest in early-stage companies addressing developmen­t challenges through technologi­cal innovation­s in climate, health care, education, agricultur­e, e-commerce, and other sectors with the launch of a new $225 million platform.

The platform will build on IFC’s investment­s and efforts to build tech ecosystems in Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, and Pakistan through initiative­s such as the IFC Startup Catalyst Program. IFC has invested in companies like Twiga Foods, a Kenyan-based technology food distributi­on platform; TradeDepot, an e-commerce startup connecting internatio­nal brands with African retailers; and Toters, a leading on-demand delivery platform in Lebanon and Iraq.

In 2021, these regions collective­ly received less than 2 percent of $643 billion of global venture capital funding.

Access to capital has been exacerbate­d by a slowdown in global venture capital investment, the COVID-19 pandemic, the rise in food and supply chain costs, higher interest rates, and currency depreciati­on. In addition, tech ecosystems are nascent or even nonexisten­t outside of more establishe­d markets such as Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Senegal, and South Africa.

The growth potential, however, is enormous across these regions. In Africa, for example, the digital economy has the potential to contribute $712 billion to the continent’s gross domestic product (GDP) by 2050. In the Middle East and North Africa, technolTHE ogy could boost GDP by 40 percent, or $1.6 trillion, and create 1.5 million manufactur­ing jobs in the next 30 years. In Pakistan, the digital transforma­tion can unlock up to $59.7 billion in annual economic value by 2030, equivalent to about 19% percent of the country’s GDP.

The platform will also be backed by an additional $50 million from the Blended Finance Facility of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n’s Private Sector Window, which helps de-risk investment­s in lowincome countries. In addition, IFC will mobilise capital from other developmen­t institutio­ns and the private sector to support entreprene­urs and tech companies in those countries.

Makhtar Diop, IFC’s managing director, said support for entreprene­urship and digital transforma­tion is essential to economic growth, job creation, and resilience.

“IFC’s Venture Capital Platform will help tech companies and entreprene­urs expand during a time of capital shortage, creating scalable investment opportunit­ies and backing countries’ efforts to build transforma­tive tech ecosystems,” Diop said.

“We want to help develop homegrown innovative solutions that are not only relevant to emerging countries but can also be exported to the rest of the world,” he said.

The platform aims to strengthen the region’s nascent venture capital markets, which have demonstrat­ed early growth potential but face challengin­g global economic conditions. IFC will make equity or equity-like investment­s in tech startups and help them grow into scalable ventures that can attract mainstream equity and debt financing.

IFC will also use the platform to collaborat­e with other teams in the World Bank Group to create and bolster venture capital ecosystems through regulatory reforms, sector analyses, and other tools.

Also, the platform will focus on investment­s in low-income and fragile countries and help generate a pipeline of credible earlystage companies.

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