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Changing the way we think about doing business in Africa is vital for those who want to succeed there. This was the key message delivered by successful African entrepreneurs at the London Business School Africa Day conference which highlighted the challenges and rewards for entrepreneurs in Africa
The premise of this one-day event was that entrepreneurship and innovation must play a pivotal role in empowering Africans to take charge of their destiny. The 2006 Africa Day set out to identify tangible approaches and programmes to develop African’s entrepreneurial potential.
With the theme ‘A Vision for Empowering an Enterprising People’, the fifth event held by one of world’s leading business schools saw an array of speakers that included African entrepreneurs from diverse sectors such as broadcasting, finance and publishing as well as representatives of investment and financial institutions active in Africa.
The keynote speaker, Baroness Valerie Amos, focused on the pivotal role the African Diaspora can play in promoting enterprise in Africa.
“I believe that the partnership between Africa and the wider Diaspora is the partnership that will really deliver the difference,” she said. Speaking of the vital need for private enterprise to change the economies of Africa, the Leader of the British House of Lords noted that the focus of debate has moved from aid for Africa to boosting enterprise.
She pointed out that the official $8 billion of remittances into Africa from Africans living outside the continent and informal estimates of $16 billion remitted through informal channels, gives the African Diaspora powerful leverage in assisting with entrepreneurial development.
During her speech, Baroness Amos announced the setting up of an independent fund for Africa to be launched in Cape Town in May 2006. The Investment Climate Facility will be managed by an independent Board and, with support from the African Union and Nepad, the $110 million fund is intended to encourage dialogue between business and government and to support African governments to create a positive environment for business. The UK has contributed $30 million to the Facility and additional contributions are expected from other public and private sector partners.
A key theme of Bruce Ayonote’s session was the need for Africans considering investment in Africa to change their mindset and to adapt their view of reward to the local circumstances. Describing the level of salary Africans educated abroad often expected as “unrealistic and unsustainable for a business”, Ayonote, the co-founder and Group CEO of Suburban Group, a Nigerian integrated telecommunications service provider, urged those listening to be less opportunist and transactional and more appreciative of the long term goals of business.
Stressing the need for applying social responsibility to enterprise in Africa, Ghanaian broadcaster George Twumasi, a driving force behind the establishment of the African Public Broadcasting Foundation, told the audience, “you need to look at opportunity through the context of social change.”
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