Entrepreneurship Is The Most Reliable Way To Build Wealth In Africa, Not Inheritance -The African Wealth Report

In Africa, wealth isn’t inherited but made, says a new report entitled The African Wealth Report, recently released by Africa’s biggest bank Standard Bank. The report found entrepreneurship to be the most common option used by Africans to create wealth. No less than 148 of 265 people surveyed in Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Nigeria and South Africa they made their first million dollars and continued to make more thereafter from entrepreneurship.

“To draw a more complete picture of the wealth sector in Africa, a total of 265 respondents were surveyed and 75 face-to-face interviews conducted across five key markets — Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Nigeria and South Africa — with the estimated net worth of 67% of participants in the $1 million to $5 million range. Around 16% of respondents had an estimated net worth of $5 million to $20 million, while the researchers from our partners, Intellidex, also canvassed those with $20 million to more than $100 million in net worth,” said Chris Browne Group Head, Standard Bank Wealth and Investment. 

Here Is What You Need To Know

In The African Wealth Report Africa’s wealthy made their money most from real estate . Source: The African Wealth Report, Standard Bank

Qualities Of Africa’s Wealthy According To The Report

Entrepreneurialism

Eclecticism

Conservative Attitude To Spending Wealth

Workaholics

“For you to be successful in your business you must work hard, you must be a workaholic like the likes of [Nigerian billionaire] Aliko Dangote, Bill Gates and others. They work all round and that has [convinced me to] wake up very early, go to bed late, thinking of how to add some innovations to my business,” a Nigerian respondent was quoted as saying. 

A Ghanaian respondent, however, said: “For every transaction, for every deal that you do, take 10 percent of that money and just have fun with it. There’s no sense in working very hard if you aren’t going to enjoy the money that you’ve made and play with it… And when you’ve made money there’s a lot of satisfaction in enjoying it. But there must be a balance, you have to know when to say, ‘playtime is over’.”


The Most Common Vehicle For Consolidating And Preserving Wealth Is Property

Strength in Diversification

“All business is risky. I have diversified my portfolio and invested in different things. I have property, I am in farming, I have a car hire business. So, I might lose in one area but not in all,” one respondent said. 

“One of the major problems business people have is that … they withdraw the capital and use it for pleasure, but I don’t think that is the right thing. As [my] business is growing, I should keep investing in my business more so that it can grow bigger and better.”

Where Africa’s wealthy made their money from. Source: The African Wealth Report, Standard Bank

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What Worries Africa’s Wealthy The Most

The Bottom Line: 

Good report! Africa’s wealthy as analysed in the report is completely captured in what one respondent was quoted (in the report) as saying “what enables you to build wealth in Africa is exactly the same thing that enabled you to build wealth in America and European countries in the 19th and 20th centuries.” However, it should be noted that the 265 sample opinions may not holistically represent what obtains across Africa. The report also appears to have completely excluded North Africa’s wealthy. But the report entirely presented the enormous investment potential across Africa. With 38% of high-net-worth individuals in the survey being between the ages of 36 to 50 years, it means that over 62% of Africa’s wealthy are still 50 and above. With rapidly expanding technological disruptions across the continent and the average age of Africa’s population being 19.7 years, Africa’s wealthy’s psychology and interests in the near future remain open-ended.

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GetFundedAfrica’s mission is to uplift people and economies in Africa through entrepreneurship; helping companies find funding, grow, create jobs and solve society’s greatest challenges

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