$100m to drive Africa women investment
Trudeau |
The ground-breaking partnership,
formally signed at the weekend in Addis Ababa between the United Nations
Economic Commission of Africa (ECA) and Standard Bank Group will be
transformational in breaking down structural barriers to inclusive investing in
Africa.
Over $20m was raised for the fund
on Saturday that has a current goal of $100m. President Paul Kagame of Rwanda
was instrumental in leading the way, pledging $500,000. Senegal’s President
Macky Sall committed $500,000. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa also
pledged to contribute to the fund. The private sector participants pledged the
rest.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of
Canada pledged $10m to the African Union to boost gender parity. Norway Prime Minister
Erna Solberg pledged $8m to AU initiatives. A portion of these resources will
be earmarked for the women’s initiative.
Among the world leaders who
witnessed the official launch of this innovative impact investment fund were UN
Secretary-General, Antonio Gutteres, African Union Commission Chairperson,
Moussa Faki Mahamat, Ethiopian President Sahle-Work Zewde. Former Liberian
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was also in attendance, as were a number of
former African heads of state.
“We are turning the tables and
making women the decision-makers of investable money in Africa. We want women
to be on the supply side of money, not only on the demand side,” said Dr. Vera
Songwe, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Secretary of ECA.
A key goal of the fund is to
empower women financial leaders who will drive economic growth, job creation,
and create prosperity.
In Africa, women-owned funds and
businesses struggle due largely to lack of successful fundraising, insufficient
exposure to systems and procedures, and lack of track records, among others.
They also contend with gender-based social expectation, resistance to women in
leadership roles and lack of a support network. The fund will empower Africa’s
women by giving them access to financial resources and investment management
expertise.
Sola David-Borha, Chief Executive
of Africa Regions at Standard Bank Group, says the fund aligns with the Bank’s
purpose to drive Africa’s growth and “presents an opportunity for Standard Bank
to leverage our footprint and expertise on the continent, and the relevant
experience of our asset management arms, Melville Douglas and STANLIB
Multi-Managers, to build Africa’s economies. Africa is our home, we drive her
growth.”
Women fund managers will receive
a deployment of capital, and subsequently invest in majority female-owned
businesses. Even though the fund is sector agnostic, priority sectors will be
education, manufacturing, healthcare, clean energy and agriculture.
Additionally, technical assistance for fund managers and entrepreneurs will be
offered through the initiative. This ranges from building capacity, direct
mentoring to leveraging technology in health and education.
Songwe emphasized that “the goal
here is to give women-led financial investment activities a huge injection of
jet fuel to bear out the proven positive correlation between gender balance,
higher financial returns and developmental impact.”
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