
Investment for women-led businesses is missing ingredient African entrepreneurship
February 19th, 2021 – Women make up 58% of African’s self-employed population, yet there are still significant imbalances between opportunities to scale, access to funding and training between men and women-led businesses on the continent.
There is clear evidence of this in a recent World Bank report, Profiting from Parity, which shows that women entrepreneurs across sub-Saharan Africa continue to earn lower profits than men – 34% less on average.
There is an irony in these inequalities: for investors, women are, in many ways, a better bet than men. In general, women in Africa are more likely than men to choose entrepreneurship as they find themselves in situations where they need to put their natural problem-solving skills to use. In Africa, 5% of Chief Executive Officers are women – slightly higher than the global average of 4%. Moreover, research shows that technology firms led by women experience a 35% higher return on investment than those led by men.
Written by The Africa Report
Related Post
ICSB Releases Top 10 Global Trends...
The International Council for Small Business (ICSB) has published its annual Top 10 Trends for MSMEs in 2026, authored by ICSB President &am...
The European Commission’s Annual Report on...
The European Commission has published its Annual Report on European SMEs (2025/2026) and a new report on women entrepreneurs in Europe, prov...
Alibaba Steps Up Global Outreach to...
Alibaba Group has recently intensified efforts to bring AI tools and training to SMEs across several countries, a pattern worth noting for W...




