Let’s create the right structures to enable young ones create innovative, compelling businesses – Akufo-Addo tells African leaders

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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo
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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has recognized the many challenges that need to be addressed to unlock Africa’s potential.

He however noted that most African countries are certainly moving in the right direction of tackling the challenges.

was addressing Heads of States and the international business community at the Timbuktoo: Unleashing Africa’s Startup Revolution, organised on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, in Davos Switzerland, on Tuesday, 16th January 2023.

“Indeed, for many African leaders, our foremost challenge now, and over the short term, is to ensure that we put in place the right structures to enable  to create innovative and compelling  that can contribute significantly to job creation and sustainable economic growth,” he said.

With such focus on job creation, primarily due to Africa’s 1.3 billion people, which is expected to double up to 2.5 billion by 2050, President Akufo-Addo added that, “Africa has the youngest population in the world, according to the U.N., with some sixty percent of the population under the age of twenty-five.”

Private funding for risky yet innovative ventures will develop Africa – Akufo-Addo

President Akufo-Addo said with this exciting growth potential already enticing entrepreneurs and investors into the continent, it has been driven by a combination of factors including low market penetration, as well as a variety of industries which remain underserved.

“According to the African Venture Capital Association, African start-ups have been on an upward fundraising trend in the past few years. Indeed, the average annual growth rate in the value of venture capital deals, for instance, was over one hundred percent between 2017 and 2019.”

He added that, as of 2022, Africa raised $5.2 billion in venture capital across 786 deals, representing three percent of the total volume, 1.2% of the total value of global venture funding in 2022.

He also mentioned Africa as being the only region outside of Europe to witness positive year-on-year growth that quarter, with venture capital funding to Africa throughout 2023 consistently outpacing South America, the continent’s whose socio-economic indices are closest to us in Africa.

Contextually, “Africa raised US$2.9 billion between the first and third quarters of 2023, compared to US$1.6 billion for Latin America within the same timeframe”, he disclosed.

He said the ravaging effects of COVID, has left Sub-Saharan Africa alone in need of some US$574 billion annually, until 2030 to finance the Sustainable Development Goals ().

In lieu of this, he concluded on the conviction that, private sector investments will play a significant role in our post-COVID bounce back, just as alternative financing instruments, such as equity investments, as well as the “channelling some of the inbound public and private investment flows toward sectors such as fintech, information technology, and green manufacturing, leading to Africa’s economic recovery and transformation.”