President Akufo-Addo has emphasized the importance of attracting private funding, particularly for innovative endeavors, to achieve Africa’s development goals.
He believes this path can be pursued alongside other efforts to safeguard the future of African economies.
The President addressed Heads of States and the international business community at the Timbuktoo: Unleashing Africa’s Startup Revolution event during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on January 16, 2023.
The Timbuktoo initiative, a private-focused undertaking, aims to address the gap in early-stage risk capital and enhance integration among African innovation players, from universities to corporates to investors.
“2023 was the year African economies consolidated their recovery and demonstrated resilience and adaptability while navigating an uncertain global environment,” after bracing with obvious bruises, the turbulences that heralded the beginning of the 2020s.
The goal is to empower startups to capture opportunities in the African market, ultimately birthing over a thousand startups with a significant impact on more than a hundred million livelihoods, generating over ten billion dollars in wealth and value for Africa’s economies.
President Akufo-Addo, discussing the interplay between finance, entrepreneurship, technology, and youth empowerment, stated that 2023 marked the year when African economies demonstrated resilience and adaptability, with average growth reaching 4.1% in 2023 and a forecasted growth of 4.3% in 2024.
“Economic growth has rebounded, with an average GDP of 3.2% for the first nine months of 2023, compared to 2.9% within the same period in 2022, the exchange rate is more stable, and interest rates are softening.”
“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 young Africans create innovative and compelling businesses that can contribute significantly to job creation and sustainable economic growth,” he added.
He cited Ghana’s turnaround, with improved GDP growth, stable exchange rates, and softened interest rates.
While acknowledging challenges, the President expressed satisfaction that most African countries were moving in the right direction. He highlighted the need for structures that enable young Africans to create innovative businesses contributing to job creation and sustainable economic growth, given Africa’s youthful population, projected to double by 2050.
President Akufo-Addo emphasized Africa’s attractiveness for entrepreneurs and investors, noting the continent’s positive growth trends in venture capital deals. He revealed that Africa raised $5.2 billion in venture capital in 2022, representing 3% of the global volume. Despite the impacts of COVID-19, Africa’s need for $574 billion annually until 2030 to finance the Sustainable Development Goals underscores the crucial role of private sector investments in post-pandemic recovery and transformation.